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A comparison of transient experiential wellbeing across health enhancing behaviours in the American Time Use Survey

February 24th, 2026
United States
Jessica K Bone, Feifei Bu, Jill Sonke, Daisy Fancourt
This study compares how different health-enhancing activities relate to momentary wellbeing using data from over 11,000 participants. It finds that receptive arts engagement, such as attending performances or listening to music, is associated with the highest levels of happiness, highlighting the role of arts and leisure activities in shaping everyday emotional experiences.
Scientific Reports
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-026-40985-7
Posted byJai Narayan

Abstract/Description

Health-enhancing behaviours can support long-term subjective wellbeing. However, less research has examined experiential wellbeing (how people feel in the moment). By comparing experiential wellbeing during different health-enhancing behaviours, we could learn which dimensions of behaviours promote health. We included 11,144 participants from the American Time Use Survey who engaged in health-enhancing behaviours and reported levels of positive (happiness) and negative (sadness, stress, tiredness, pain) affect. Multilevel linear regression models tested how affect differed during eight behaviours. Social engagement was most common, followed by reading and physical activity. Attending sports events was least common. Pain and tiredness were higher during physical activity than other behaviours. Happiness was highest when doing receptive arts (attending performing arts, museums, watching dance, listening to music) and lowest when volunteering and reading. Results for sadness and stress were more variable. Activities that were done with others, outside the home, and that were very meaningful were associated with more positive and less negative affect. Overall, health-enhancing behaviours evoked complex emotional reactions, with positive and negative affect experienced simultaneously. Recommendations around health-enhancing leisure activities in Western countries focus on physical activity, but our findings support calls to include more activities alongside guidance on the context in which people engage.

Associated Authors

Professor of Psychobiology & Epidemiology at University College London

Associated Journals/Periodicals