A Dose of Nature: Two three-level meta-analyses of the beneficial effects of exposure to nature on children's self-regulation

Publication date: Available online 1 August 2019Source: Journal of Environmental PsychologyAuthor(s): Martina A. Moens, Joyce Weeland, Femke Beute, Mark Assink, Janneke P.C. Staaks, Geertjan OverbeekAbstractThere is growing evidence that exposure to nature, as opposed to a built environment, is associated with better mental health. Specifically in children, more exposure to nature seems to be associated with better cognitive, affective, and behavioral self-regulation. Because studies are scattered over different scientific disciplines, it is difficult to create a coherent overview of empirical findings. We therefore conducted a meta-analytic overview of studies on the effect of exposure to nature on self-regulation of schoolchildren (Mage = 7.84 years; SD = 2.46). Our 3-level meta-analyses showed small, but significant positive overall associations of nature with self-regulation in both correlational (15 studies, r = 0.10; p < .001) and (quasi-) experimental (16 studies, d = 0.15; p < .01) studies. Moderation analyses revealed no differential associations based on most sample or study characteristics. However, in correlational studies the type of instrument used to measure exposure to nature (index score vs. parent-report) significantly moderated the association between nature and self-regulation. Stronger associations were found in studies where exposure to nature was assessed via parent-report than via an index. Our findings suggest that natu...
Source: Journal of Environmental Psychology - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research