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The Daily Dish - 2006-2011 archives for The Daily Dish, featuring Andrew Sullivan

Nature Is Good For You

By The Daily Dish
Nov 11 2008, 3:22 AM ET

Jonah Lehrer sums up a new study:

Thoreau would have liked this study: interacting with nature (at least when compared to a hectic urban landscape) dramatically improves improve cognitive function. In particular, being in natural settings restores our ability to exercise directed attention and working memory, which are crucial mental talents. The basic idea is that nature, unlike a city, is filled with inherently interesting stimuli (like a sunset, or an unusual bird) that trigger our involuntary attention, but in a modest fashion. Because you can't help but stop and notice the reddish orange twilight sky - paying attention to the sunset doesn't take any extra work or cognitive control - our attentional circuits are able to refresh themselves. A walk in the woods is like a vacation for the prefrontal cortex.

Maybe that's why I often seem to write and think more clearly in Provincetown. Of which Thoreau would surely have approved as well.



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