AI Article Synopsis

  • - Aging often leads to feelings of social disconnection, anxiety, and sadness, which negatively affect older adults' well-being and longevity.
  • - A study tested the impact of an "awe walk" intervention on older adults by having one group focus on experiencing awe during their outdoor walks, while another group walked without this focus.
  • - Results showed that the awe walk participants reported greater feelings of joy and prosocial emotions, and exhibited enhanced social connection, while also experiencing less daily distress compared to the control group.

Article Abstract

Aging into later life is often accompanied by social disconnection, anxiety, and sadness. Negative emotions are self-focused states with detrimental effects on aging and longevity. Awe-a positive emotion elicited when in the presence of vast things not immediately understood-reduces self-focus, promotes social connection, and fosters prosocial actions by encouraging a "small self." We investigated the emotional benefits of a novel "awe walk" intervention in healthy older adults. Sixty participants took weekly 15-min outdoor walks for 8 weeks; participants were randomly assigned to an awe walk group, which oriented them to experience awe during their walks, or to a control walk group. Participants took photographs of themselves during each walk and rated their emotional experience. Each day, they reported on their daily emotional experience outside of the walk context. Participants also completed pre- and postintervention measures of anxiety, depression, and life satisfaction. Compared with participants who took control walks, those who took awe walks experienced greater awe during their walks and exhibited an increasingly "small self" in their photographs over time. They reported greater joy and prosocial positive emotions during their walks and displayed increasing smile intensity over the study. Outside of the walk context, participants who took awe walks reported greater increases in daily prosocial positive emotions and greater decreases in daily distress over time. Postintervention anxiety, depression, and life satisfaction did not change from baseline in either group. These results suggest cultivating awe enhances positive emotions that foster social connection and diminishes negative emotions that hasten decline. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8034841PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/emo0000876DOI Listing

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  • - A study tested the impact of an "awe walk" intervention on older adults by having one group focus on experiencing awe during their outdoor walks, while another group walked without this focus.
  • - Results showed that the awe walk participants reported greater feelings of joy and prosocial emotions, and exhibited enhanced social connection, while also experiencing less daily distress compared to the control group.
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