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Nature nurtures authenticity: Mechanisms and consequences

Nature nurtures authenticity: Mechanisms and consequences
Nature nurtures authenticity: Mechanisms and consequences
Contact with nature may benefit, not only the bodily organism, but also the psychological self. We proposed that, assuming humans’ innate affinity for nature (the biophilia hypothesis), nature would be conducive to a sense of environment-self fit, which would be experienced as authenticity (being aligned with one’s true self). We formulated several hypotheses: (1) Nature fosters authenticity, and it does so through at least four plausible mechanisms: self-esteem, basic needs satisfaction (autonomy, competence, relatedness), mindfulness, and positive affect; (2) Self-esteem is the strongest mechanism overall, and autonomy the strongest mechanism of the three basic needs; (3) Self-esteem and authenticity mediate sequentially the positive impact of nature on current psychological wellbeing (higher life satisfaction and meaning in life); and (4) Authenticity mediates the positive influence of nature on longer-term psychological wellbeing (higher life satisfaction and meaning in life; lower depression, anxiety, and stress). We obtained support for these hypotheses across 12 studies (N = 5512). These were diverse in terms of setting (field, laboratory), designs (cross-sectional, experimental, longitudinal), methodology (varying manipulations of nature and assessment of mediators and/or dependent measures), and sampling (university/community, East Asian/Western). The findings establish nature as a correlate and determinant of authenticity, chiefly via the mechanism of self-esteem, and further establish authenticity (preceded by self-esteem) as a mediator of the positive influence of nature on psychological wellbeing. The findings are also generative and have policy implications.
nature, authenticity, autonomy need satisfaction, positive affect, self-esteem, mindfulness, psychological wellbeing
0022-3514
Yang, Ying
80e71e0e-93df-451a-aeba-1c8b3a9724f2
Sedikides, Constantine
9d45e66d-75bb-44de-87d7-21fd553812c2
Wang, Yuqi
cbe66c7a-11a9-4d94-9b66-d8898a99b545
Cai, Huajian
8fb40f07-ba8e-466f-82e1-06d35c5dbaac
Yang, Ying
80e71e0e-93df-451a-aeba-1c8b3a9724f2
Sedikides, Constantine
9d45e66d-75bb-44de-87d7-21fd553812c2
Wang, Yuqi
cbe66c7a-11a9-4d94-9b66-d8898a99b545
Cai, Huajian
8fb40f07-ba8e-466f-82e1-06d35c5dbaac

Yang, Ying, Sedikides, Constantine, Wang, Yuqi and Cai, Huajian (2023) Nature nurtures authenticity: Mechanisms and consequences. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. (doi:10.1037/pspi0000432). (In Press)

Record type: Review

Abstract

Contact with nature may benefit, not only the bodily organism, but also the psychological self. We proposed that, assuming humans’ innate affinity for nature (the biophilia hypothesis), nature would be conducive to a sense of environment-self fit, which would be experienced as authenticity (being aligned with one’s true self). We formulated several hypotheses: (1) Nature fosters authenticity, and it does so through at least four plausible mechanisms: self-esteem, basic needs satisfaction (autonomy, competence, relatedness), mindfulness, and positive affect; (2) Self-esteem is the strongest mechanism overall, and autonomy the strongest mechanism of the three basic needs; (3) Self-esteem and authenticity mediate sequentially the positive impact of nature on current psychological wellbeing (higher life satisfaction and meaning in life); and (4) Authenticity mediates the positive influence of nature on longer-term psychological wellbeing (higher life satisfaction and meaning in life; lower depression, anxiety, and stress). We obtained support for these hypotheses across 12 studies (N = 5512). These were diverse in terms of setting (field, laboratory), designs (cross-sectional, experimental, longitudinal), methodology (varying manipulations of nature and assessment of mediators and/or dependent measures), and sampling (university/community, East Asian/Western). The findings establish nature as a correlate and determinant of authenticity, chiefly via the mechanism of self-esteem, and further establish authenticity (preceded by self-esteem) as a mediator of the positive influence of nature on psychological wellbeing. The findings are also generative and have policy implications.

Text
Yang et al., 2023, JPSP - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 11 June 2023
Keywords: nature, authenticity, autonomy need satisfaction, positive affect, self-esteem, mindfulness, psychological wellbeing

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 480453
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480453
ISSN: 0022-3514
PURE UUID: ab36874d-dec3-4244-b8bf-fa8615f09ed7
ORCID for Constantine Sedikides: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4036-889X

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 02 Aug 2023 16:48
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:51

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Contributors

Author: Ying Yang
Author: Yuqi Wang
Author: Huajian Cai

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