Bookworms rejoice! A new study in the journal Social
Science and Medicine just discovered that people who read books live
longer than people who don’t.
Researchers at Yale University asked 3,635 participants over
50 years-old about their reading habits. From that data, they split the cohort
into 3 groups: non-readers, people who read less than 3.5 hours per week, and
people who read more than 3.5 hours per week. The researchers followed up with
each group for 12 years. The people who read the most were college-educated
women in the higher-income group.
Over the course of the study, the researchers consistently
found that both groups of readers lived longer than the non-readers. The
readers who read over 3.5 hours a week lived a full 23 months longer than the
people who didn’t read at all.
That extended lifespan applied to all reading participants,
regardless of “gender, wealth, education or health” factors, the study
explains. That’s a 20% reduction in mortality created by a sedentary activity.
That’s a big deal, and a very easy fix for improving quality of life in anyone
over 50.
The results get better. “Compared to non-book readers,” the
authors continue, “book readers had a 4-month survival advantage,” at the age
when 20% of their peers passed away. “Book readers also experienced a 20%
reduction in risk of mortality over the 12 years of follow up compared to
non-book readers.” The authors continue:
“Further, our analyses demonstrated that any level of book
reading gave a significantly stronger survival advantage than reading
periodicals. This is a novel finding, as previous studies did not compare types
of reading material; it indicates that book reading rather than reading in
general is driving a survival advantage.”
The reason books had greater gains than periodicals is
because book reading involves more cognitive faculties. The readers didn’t
begin with higher cognitive faculties than the non-readers; they simply engaged
in the activity of reading, which heightened those faculties.
“This finding suggests that reading books provide a survival
advantage due to the immersive nature that helps maintain cognitive status,”
said the study’s authors.
As any book lover knows, reading involves two major cognitive
processes: deep reading, and emotional connection. Deep reading is a slow
process where the reader engages with the book and seeks to understand it
within its own context and within the context of the outside world.
Emotional connection is where the reader empathizes with the characters, and that promotes social perception and emotional intelligence. Those cognitive processes were cited by the Yale team and used as markers for this study.
While they apparently offer a survival advantage, “better health
behaviors and reduced stress may explain this process [as well],” according to
the study. Still, those cognitive benefits are real…
All the data was self-reported via phone survey and it didn’t
really account for ebooks, but it’s still encouraging. There are no real
downsides to reading, other than making the time for it… .
-Laurie Vazquez, Big Think
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.