Institute of Sports, Physical Education and Outdoor Life, University of South-Eastern Norway, 3800 Bø i Telemark, Norway.
Department of Human Movement Science, University of Hamburg, 20148 Hamburg, Germany.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 Jul 26;18(15):7897. doi: 10.3390/ijerph18157897.
Solo-being intentionally solitary in nature-is receiving growing attention as a valuable outdoor education program component. Its practice and history have been researched in the context of experiential learning, but few studies have explicitly examined how solo experiences can affect dimensions of well-being. This study investigated a broad range of well-being pathways provided by being solo, based on data from Norway, Germany, and New Zealand.
Using qualitative content analysis (QCA), the solo debrief responses of 40 participants (26 females, age: 19-64 years) were analysed, applying the PERMA-V framework (emotions, engagement, relationship, meaning, achievement, and vitality). Variations in the reports were explored as a function of the national sample, gender, age, prior solo experiences and expectations.
The study suggests that hedonic and eudemonic well-being pathways, represented by the six PERMA-V pillars, interrelate strongly. The experience of a range of positive emotions and connecting process during solo highlights two of the most frequent findings related to well-being pathways. The secondary findings suggest minor variations in the well-being pathways for the different national samples, gender and age. Expectations and prior experiences with solo were identified as context factors with minor impact. Further, the data-driven analysis identified specific physical activities, landscape features, sense-activation, perception of time and 'good' weather as relevant to the specific experience.
Solo experiences provide for well-being-related pathways in a multitude of ways, which highlights the well-being potential of solo implementation across practical fields beyond outdoor education, such as wilderness therapy, and environmental and planetary health initiatives. Future studies should continue to explore solo's well-being potential in different settings, especially in the context of non-Western samples.
独自在自然中存在——作为一种有价值的户外教育项目组成部分,正受到越来越多的关注。它的实践和历史在体验式学习的背景下进行了研究,但很少有研究明确考察独自体验如何影响幸福感的各个维度。本研究基于挪威、德国和新西兰的数据,调查了独自体验提供的广泛的幸福感途径。
使用定性内容分析(QCA),对 40 名参与者(26 名女性,年龄:19-64 岁)的独自反思报告进行了分析,应用 PERMA-V 框架(情感、投入、关系、意义、成就和活力)。根据国家样本、性别、年龄、先前的独自经验和期望,探索报告中的变化。
该研究表明,享乐和幸福的幸福感途径,由六个 PERMA-V 支柱代表,彼此之间有很强的关联。在独自体验过程中体验到一系列积极的情绪和联系过程,突出了与幸福感途径相关的两个最常见的发现。次要发现表明,不同国家样本、性别和年龄的幸福感途径存在细微差异。预期和先前的独自经验被确定为具有较小影响的背景因素。此外,基于数据的分析确定了特定的身体活动、景观特征、感觉激活、时间感知和“好”天气与特定体验相关。
独自体验以多种方式提供了与幸福感相关的途径,这突出了在户外教育等实际领域之外实施独自的幸福感潜力,例如荒野治疗和环境与行星健康倡议。未来的研究应继续在不同的环境中探索独自的幸福感潜力,特别是在非西方样本的背景下。