Walking can improve mood due to our hunter-gatherer roots

The mere act of putting one foot in front of the other for a few minutes can significantly boost our mood, a study has discovered.

And it doesn’t matter where we do it, why we do it, who we do it with, or what effect we expect the walk to have. 

Psychologists say the happiness-causing effects arise from the actual physical movement which is connected to how we evolved to move to find food and other rewards. 

The researchers say their study is the first to show this by stripping away all the many factors associated with exercise – such as getting fresh air, being in nature and the satisfaction of reaching fitness goals.

Essentially, ‘movement not only causes increased positive affect [emotional feelings] … but movement partially embodies, or in a sense reflects, positive affect,’ the study authors from The Iowa State University wrote in the paper published in the journal Emotion. 

The act of walking – irrespective of where we do it, why we do it and who we do it with – was shown to lift mood (file photo)

BRITAIN’S LAZINESS EPIDEMIC 

Britain is in the grip of an ‘inactivity epidemic’, with nearly half of adults failing to go for a brisk walk even once a month.

Health bosses say 45 per cent of over-16s are so sedentary they do not manage the health-boosting ten-minute walk.

Public Health England (PHE) officials are especially worried about more than 6 million inactive people aged between 40 and 60 who are putting their busy lives ahead of their health. 

In a major change of strategy, they said inactive people should start aiming simply to get out for a short walk each day – rather than the more ambitious 150 minutes of exercise a week that has dominated NHS advice for years.

They said the British population was 20 per cent less active now than in the 1960s, and the average person walked 15 miles less a year than they did just two decades ago.

How the research was carried out 

Across three studies, the team tested hundreds of undergraduate students who were not aware of the true aims of the research to avoid biased answers. 

Two of the studies showed that students who spent 12 minutes on a group walking tour of campus buildings, or on a dull walking tour on their own of the interior of a campus building, reported more positive mood. 

This was compared to another group who sat and looking at photographs of the same campus tour, or watched a video of the same building interior tour.

In a second study, positive mood effects were also found even when researchers induced ‘dread’ in the participants before their walk, by instructing them that after the walk they had to write a two-page essay afterwards.  

In the final study, students spent 10 minutes watching a Saatchi Gallery video alone, one, in three groups who were either sitting, standing or walking on a treadmill. 

Once again, at the end, the students who’d spent time walking reported more positive mood scores than those who had been sitting or standing.  

Authors Jeffrey Miller and Zlatan Krizan wrote: ‘People may underestimate the extent to which just getting off their couch and going for a walk will benefit their mood as they focus on momentarily perceived barriers rather than eventual mood benefits.’ 

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk