Watching Sports Is Good For Your Mental Health, Research Says
Many people find joy in watching sports. Yes, it’s true, even when your favorite team isn’t playing their best. Beyond entertainment and relaxation, watching sports gives people a sense of community and belonging. To address the “limited evidence” on the link between watching sports and well-being, a team of researchers from Japan found that sports viewing activates brain reward circuits.
The team, led by Associate Professor Shintaro Sato from the Faculty of Sport Sciences at Waseda University, found that watching sports, particularly in large crowds, goes “beyond entertainment.”
“This sense of connection not only makes individuals feel good but also benefits society by improving health, enhancing productivity, and reducing crime,” said Professor Sato.
What They Found
In the first study, the researchers analyzed large-scale publicly available data on the influence of watching sports on 20,000 residents. The results of this study confirmed the ongoing pattern of elevated reported well-being associated with regular sports viewing. However, this study was limited by its inability to provide deeper insight into the relationship between sports consumption and well-being.
The second study, an online survey involving 208 participants, aimed at investigating whether the connection between sports viewing and well-being varied depending on the type of sport observed.
The experiment exposed them to a range of sports videos, assessing their well-being both before and after viewing.
The findings highlighted that widely embraced sports, such as football, exerted a “more significant” impact on enhancing well-being compared to less popular sports, such as golf.
In the third study, their team employed neuro-imaging techniques to “scrutinize” alterations in the brain activity of 14 participants before and after watching sports clips. The results showed that watching sports triggered activation in the brain’s reward circuits, indicative of feelings of happiness or pleasure.
Watching Sports And Your Well-Being
The analysis also revealed that people who reported watching sports more frequently exhibited greater gray matter volume in regions associated with reward circuits, suggesting that regular sports viewing may gradually induce changes in brain structures.
“Both subjective and objective measures of well-being were found to be positively influenced by engaging in sports viewing,” said Prof. Sato. “By inducing structural changes in the brain’s reward system over time, it fosters long-term benefits for individuals.”
The Professor went on to say that for those seeking to enhance their overall well-being, regularly watching sports, particularly popular ones such as baseball or soccer, can serve as an “effective remedy.”