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Stress Regulation via Being in Nature and Social Support in Adults, a Meta-analysis

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Author
Sparacio, Alessandro
Ropovik, IvanORCiD Profile - 0000-0001-5222-1233WoS Profile - J-7404-2015Scopus Profile - 56095404500
Jiga-Boy, Gabriela
Lagap, Adar Cem
IJzerman, Hans

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Publication date
2023
Published in
COLLABRA-PSYCHOLOGY
Volume / Issue
9 (1)
ISBN / ISSN
ISSN: 2474-7394
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  • Faculty of Education

This publication has a published version with DOI 10.1525/collabra.77343

Abstract
In this meta-analysis, the authors investigated whether being in nature and emotional social support are reliable strategies to downregulate stress. We retrieved all the relevant articles that investigated a connection between one of these two strategies and stress. For being in nature we found 54 effects reported in 16 papers (total N = 1,697, MdnN = 52.5), while for emotional social support we found 18 effects reported in 13 papers (total N = 3,787, MdnN = 186). Although we initially found an effect for being in nature and emotional social support on stress (Hedges' g =-.42; Hedges' g =-.14, respectively), the effect only held for being in nature after applying our main publication bias correction technique (Hedges' g =-.60). The emotional social support literature also had a high risk of bias. Although the being-in-nature literature was moderately powered (.72) to detect effects of Cohen's d = .50 or larger, the risk of bias was considerable, and the reporting contained numerous statistical reporting errors.
Keywords
Stress regulation, being in nature, social support, meta-analysis, Registered Report,
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14178/2270
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WOS:001009467400001
SCOPUS:2-s2.0-85162236491
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Full text of this result is licensed under: Creative Commons Uveďte původ 4.0 International

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