www.washingtonpost.com Open in urlscan Pro
23.45.108.250  Public Scan

URL: https://www.washingtonpost.com/wellness/interactive/2023/birds-song-nature-mental-health-benefits/?utm_campaign=wp_post_most&ut...
Submission: On October 30 via api from BE — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 1 forms found in the DOM

<form class="w-100 left" id="registration-form" data-qa="regwall-registration-form-container" novalidate="">
  <div>
    <div data-testid="input-text-container" class="wpds-c-jwIEZH wpds-c-jwIEZH-iPJLV-css">
      <div class="wpds-c-cgcUHx"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 16 16" fill="currentColor" aria-hidden="true" focusable="false" role="img" class="wpds-c-fBqPWp ">
          <path d="M1 3v10h14V3Zm12.19 1L8 8.32 2.81 4ZM2 12V4.63l6 5 6-5V12Z"></path>
        </svg></div>
      <div class="wpds-c-iQOSPq"><span role="label" id="radix-0" class="wpds-c-bROtJV wpds-c-iJWmNK">Enter email address</span><input id="registration-email-id" type="email" aria-invalid="false" name="registration-email"
          data-qa="regwall-registration-form-email-input" data-private="true" class="wpds-c-djFMBQ wpds-c-djFMBQ-iPJLV-css" value="" aria-labelledby="radix-0"></div>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div class="dn">
    <div class="db mt-xs mb-xs "><span role="label" id="radix-1" class="wpds-c-bROtJV"><span class="db font-xxxs gray-darker pt-xxs pb-xxs gray-dark" style="padding-top: 1px;"><span>By selecting "Start reading," you agree to The Washington Post's
            <a target="_blank" style="color:inherit;" class="underline" href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/information/2022/01/01/terms-of-service/">Terms of Service</a> and
            <a target="_blank" style="color:inherit;" class="underline" href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/privacy-policy/">Privacy Policy</a>.</span></span></span>
      <div class="db gray-dark relative flex pt-xxs pb-xxs items-start gray-darker"><span role="label" id="radix-2" class="wpds-c-bROtJV wpds-c-jDXwHV"><button type="button" role="checkbox" aria-checked="false" data-state="unchecked" value="on"
            id="mcCheckbox" data-testid="mcCheckbox" class="wpds-c-gDyjhx wpds-c-gDyjhx-bnVAXI-size-125 wpds-c-gDyjhx-kFjMjo-cv wpds-c-gDyjhx-ikKWKCv-css" aria-labelledby="radix-2"></button><input type="checkbox" aria-hidden="true" tabindex="-1"
            value="on" style="transform: translateX(-100%); position: absolute; pointer-events: none; opacity: 0; margin: 0px; width: 0px; height: 0px;"><span class="wpds-c-bFeFXz"><span class="relative db gray-darker" style="padding-top: 2px;"><span
                class="relative db font-xxxs" style="padding-top: 1px;"><span>The Washington Post may use my email address to provide me occasional special offers via email and through other platforms. I can opt out at any
                  time.</span></span></span></span></span></div>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div id="subs-turnstile-hook" data-test-id="regform" class="wpds-c-eerOeF center"></div><button data-qa="regwall-registration-form-cta-button" type="submit"
    class="wpds-c-kSOqLF wpds-c-kSOqLF-hDKJFr-variant-cta wpds-c-kSOqLF-eHdizY-density-default wpds-c-kSOqLF-ejCoEP-icon-left wpds-c-kSOqLF-ikFyhzm-css w-100 mt-sm"><span>Start reading</span></button>
</form>

Text Content

5.29.0
Accessibility statementSkip to main content

Democracy Dies in Darkness

Subscribe

Sign in
Well+BeingFood Fitness Mind Body Life
Brain Matters


WHY BIRDS AND THEIR SONGS ARE GOOD FOR OUR MENTAL HEALTH


BIRDS ARE A WAY TO CONNECT WITH NATURE, WHICH IS ASSOCIATED WITH BETTER BODY AND
BRAIN HEALTH, RESEARCH SHOWS

Warning: This graphic requires JavaScript. Please enable JavaScript for the best
experience.
By Richard Sima
May 18 at 10:40 a.m.
Share this story
597 / 597 New
Play
 



Looking to improve your mental health? Pay attention to birds.

Two studies published last year in Scientific Reports said that seeing or
hearing birds could be good for our mental well-being.

So give them a listen as you learn why they may help.

Listen to the birdsongs

Research has consistently shown that more contact and interaction with nature
are associated with better body and brain health.

Birds appear to be a specific source of these healing benefits. They are almost
everywhere and provide a way to connect us to nature. And even if they are
hidden in trees or in the underbrush, we can still revel in their songs.

Story continues below advertisement

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement


“The special thing about birdsongs is that even if people live in very urban
environments and do not have a lot of contact with nature, they link the songs
of birds to vital and intact natural environments,” said Emil Stobbe, an
environmental neuroscience graduate student at the Max Planck Institute for
Human Development and author of one of the studies.

Recent research also suggests that listening to recordings of their songs, even
through headphones, can alleviate negative emotions.


Meadowlark


BEING AROUND BIRDS IS ASSOCIATED WITH BETTER MENTAL HEALTH

Everyday encounters with the bird kind are associated with better mental health.

In one study, researchers asked about 1,300 participants to collect information
about their environment and well-being three times a day using a smartphone app
called Urban Mind.

The participants were not explicitly told that the researchers were looking at
birds — the app was also collecting data about other vitals such as sleep
quality, subjective assessment of air quality, and location details. But the
26,856 assessments offered a rich data set of what is associated with mental
well-being in real time in the real world.

By analyzing the data, the researchers found a significant positive association
between seeing or hearing birds and improved mental well-being, even when
accounting for other possible explanations such as education, occupation, or the
presence of greenery and water, which have themselves been associated with
positive mental health.

The benefits persisted well beyond the bird encounter. If a participant reported
seeing or hearing birds at one point, their mental well-being was higher, on
average, hours later even if they did not encounter birds at the next check-in.

Warbler

Bobolink

Ryan Hammoud, a PhD candidate at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology &
Neuroscience at King’s College London and an author of the study, called it a
“time-lasting link.”

Intriguingly, the birds benefit both healthy participants and those who have
been diagnosed with depression, which is one of the most common mental illnesses
worldwide and does not always respond to conventional pharmaceutical treatments.

This has an interesting implication for trying to protect and preserve
environments to sustain bird life, Hammoud said, “because people with depression
do show positive effects toward birdsong and birdlife in the area.”

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement



LISTENING TO BIRDSONGS ALLEVIATES FEELINGS OF ANXIETY AND PARANOIA

The birdsongs you are hearing may already be helping your mood.

A second study found that listening to short — just six-minute — audio clips of
birdsong could reduce feelings of anxiety, depression and paranoia in healthy
participants.

“Listening to birdsong through headphones was able to hit the same pathways that
might be beneficial toward mental well-being,” said Hammoud, who was not
involved in the second study. “That’s a very, very nice finding,”

Researchers asked 295 online participants to self-assess their emotional states
and to take a cognitive memory test. Then they randomly assigned the
participants to listen to birdsongs or traffic noise, of more or less diversity.
The researchers then had the subjects remeasure their emotional and cognitive
states.


Woodpecker

Participants who listened to more diverse birdsongs (featuring the acoustic
acrobatics of eight species) reported a decrease in depressive symptoms in
addition to significant decreases in feelings of anxiety and paranoia. And those
who listened to less diverse birdsongs (two bird species) also reported a
significant decrease in feelings of anxiety and paranoia.

(This study was conducted in Europe, and the birds featured were also European.
The ones you are seeing and hearing now are more likely to be encountered by our
North American readers in their backyards.)

By contrast, listening to more or less diverse traffic noise worsened symptoms
of depressive states.

The research shows the “healing aspects of nature, or also the not-so-positive
effects of urban surroundings,” said Stobbe, an author of the second study.

Previous research on the health effects of nature sounds found that they could
even confer cognitive benefits, though the second study did not replicate that
finding.

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement



WHY NATURE AND BIRDS MAY BENEFIT US

Birds help us feel more connected with nature and its health effects, Stobbe
said, and the more connected we are to nature, the more we can benefit from
those effects.

One hypothesis on nature’s salubrious effects, known as the attention
restoration theory, posits that being in nature is good for improving
concentration and decreasing the mental fatigue associated with living in
stressful urban environments. Natural stimuli, such as birdsong, may allow us to
engage in “soft fascination,” which holds our attention but also allows it to
replenish.

Nature — and birdsong — also reduce stress. Previous research has found that
time spent in green outdoor spaces can lower blood pressure and cortisol levels,
Hammoud said.

It is not yet understood how birdsong affects our brains, but neuroimaging
studies have found brain responses of stress reduction to other forms of nature
exposure.

Walking in nature vs. an urban environment decreased self-reported rumination,
which is linked to a risk of depression and other mental illnesses, and
decreased activity in a part of the brain’s prefrontal cortex associated with
rumination. Viewing green scenery engages the posterior cingulate cortex, which
is associated with behavioral stress responses and may help regulate the
reduction in stress responses from nature exposure.

Going out to see birds also tends to encourage more physical activity, which has
its own panoply of mental health benefits, and exercising outdoors may, in turn,
magnify the health benefits of exercise.

[Sign up for the Well+Being newsletter, your source of expert advice and simple
tips to help you live well every day]


HOW TO GET THE MOST OUT OF BIRDS

Be aware.

When we go outside, it is easy to forget that birds are also there singing their
hearts out if we don’t pay attention.

“Try to be aware. And that’s actually all that you need to do,” Stobbe said.
“And with this little step, you can be one step closer to getting those
beneficial effects or enhancing the time that you spend outdoors.”

Be curious.

What is that bird? Smartphone applications such as Merlin Bird ID and BirdNet,
both produced by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, can help identify the bird
producing the song and visualize its spectrogram. Apps such as these or eBird
also help identify the bird you are seeing from its size, colors and location.

Tools such as BirdCast give live maps of bird migrations in your area — and
reveal just how much bird activity you may be missing.

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement
Advertisement


Be involved.

We can enjoy our feathered friends at any level of intensity. You can watch and
listen to birds in your own backyard. You can also find a birding group and meet
other birders in your area.

Be present.

We can find more joy by savoring the birds we see and the songs we hear. One
recent preliminary study found that birdwatchers who paid attention to the joy
they felt for each bird reported greater mental health benefits than those who
merely counted the birds they saw.

Birdsongs can be used to soothe our minds in a stressful world, or in a clinical
setting to treat patients with anxiety or paranoia, both studies suggest.

“People can use easy, accessible treatment or prevention techniques by just
listening to an audio CD of things representing nature,” Stobbe said. “Or, of
course, also going inside nature and trying to seek those effects.”


Sandhill Crane

Do you have a question about human behavior or neuroscience? Email
BrainMatters@washpost.com and we may answer it in a future column.

ABOUT THIS STORY

Audio recordings of individual birds from eBird and of grouped songs from
Xeno-canto Foundation and Naturalis Biodiversity Center.

Audio editing by Ariel Plotnick. Illustrations by George Wylesol for The
Washington Post. Design and art direction by Chelsea Conrad. Development by
Garland Potts.

Press Enter to skip to end of carousel



MORE FROM BRAIN MATTERS

Carousel - $More from Brain Matters: use tab or arrows to navigate


Want to cut your dementia risk? Keep your blood pressure in check.

Oct. 30, 2024

Serious infections linked to dementia risk, study shows

Oct. 18, 2024

Parkinson’s is often misdiagnosed. New tests may change that.

Oct. 10, 2024

Be humble. It’s good for learning and your relationships.

Sept. 19, 2024

Parkinson’s may begin in the gut, study says, adding to growing evidence

Sept. 5, 2024

Covid associated with increased risk for hearing loss in young adults

Aug. 29, 2024

Yoga for the brain: It may sharpen your mind, protect against cognitive decline

Aug. 15, 2024

Even professional athletes choke. Here’s how we can manage the yips.

Aug. 8, 2024

How Olympians – and the rest of us – stay balanced and upright

Aug. 1, 2024

Why we love something that’s ‘so bad it’s good’

July 18, 2024

Does music make you move? Here’s why our brain loves to groove.

July 4, 2024

How to turn ‘summer slide’ into learning opportunities for children

June 13, 2024

These science-based tips can help you manage conflicts in relationships

May 30, 2024

Trying to catch up on lost sleep? It may not help with sleep deprivation.

May 22, 2024

Why gardening can grow your mental well-being and cultivate friends

May 17, 2024

A catatonic woman awakened after 20 years. Her story may change psychiatry.

June 1, 2023

How inflammation in the body may explain depression in the brain

Feb. 23, 2023

In the mystery of postpartum depression, the immune system offers clues

Dec. 6, 2023

This strange brain reaction to pain is called ‘muscle guarding’

May 9, 2024

How cleaning product chemicals called ‘quats’ may affect the brain

April 25, 2024

End of carousel


WANT TO LEARN MORE ABOUT BIRDING?

Birdwatching at home can help you learn about your local ecosystem. Start in
your own yard.

Bring the joy of birds into your life with these five apps.

Birds become stars of their own nature documentaries with this ‘smart’ feeder.

What does a hoot look like? What about a croak? Spectrograms see the sounds of
nature.

Which birds are the biggest jerks at the feeder?


597 / 597 New Comments
By Richard SimaRichard Sima is a neuroscientist turned award-winning science
journalist who writes the "Brain Matters" column for The Washington Post's
Well+Being desk. Twitter


Subscribe to comment and get the full experience. Choose your plan →


View more

Company
 * About The Post
 * Newsroom Policies & Standards
 * Diversity and Inclusion
 * Careers
 * Media & Community Relations
 * WP Creative Group
 * Accessibility Statement

Get The Post
 * 
 * Become a Subscriber
 * Gift Subscriptions
 * Mobile & Apps
 * Newsletters & Alerts
 * Washington Post Live
 * Reprints & Permissions
 * Post Store
 * Books & E-Books
 * Newspaper in Education
 * Print Archives (Subscribers Only)
 * Today’s Paper
 * Public Notices

Contact Us
 * Contact the Newsroom
 * Contact Customer Care
 * Contact the Opinions team
 * Advertise
 * Licensing & Syndication
 * Request a Correction
 * Send a News Tip
 * Report a Vulnerability

Terms of Use
 * Digital Products Terms of Sale
 * Print Products Terms of Sale
 * Terms of Service
 * Privacy Policy
 * Cookie Settings
 * Submissions & Discussion Policy
 * RSS Terms of Service
 * Ad Choices

washingtonpost.com © 1996-2024 The Washington Post
 * washingtonpost.com
 * © 1996-2024 The Washington Post
 * About The Post
 * Contact the Newsroom
 * Contact Customer Care
 * Request a Correction
 * Send a News Tip
 * Report a Vulnerability
 * Download the Washington Post App
 * Policies & Standards
 * Terms of Service
 * Privacy Policy
 * Cookie Settings
 * Print Products Terms of Sale
 * Digital Products Terms of Sale
 * Submissions & Discussion Policy
 * RSS Terms of Service
 * Ad Choices





Already have an account? Sign in

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


TWO WAYS TO READ THIS ARTICLE:

Create an account
Free
 * Access this article

Enter email address
By selecting "Start reading," you agree to The Washington Post's Terms of
Service and Privacy Policy.
The Washington Post may use my email address to provide me occasional special
offers via email and through other platforms. I can opt out at any time.

Start reading
Subscribe
€1every 4 weeks
 * Full access to core reporting
 * Save stories to read later

Subscribe