People looking at blue sky and trees through a window are more creative and happier than those without a view, according to a new study. 

Research has shown that being in nature generates positive emotions - but getting outdoors is increasingly uncommon in industrialised nations where people spend about 90 per cent of their time inside.

But a new study has investigated whether pleasant views through a window might offer similar advantages.

Participants in the study donned virtual reality (VR) headsets that beamed images of an office with either no window, a shuttered window, or a window view of nature.

They were then asked to complete a series of tests to measure attention, creativity, working memory, and mood.

Bond University’s Assistant Professor Oliver Baumann, a cognitive neuroscientist, said those in the room with a view performed best.

“When people were able to see the sky and trees they produced more answers in a task that demanded they come up with creative uses of everyday objects,” he said.

“And people reported more positive mood and less negative mood.”

Alertness and working memory remained the same in all scenarios.

VR headsets were used in the study to counter variables such as noise and weather.

Dr Baumann said a better understanding of how the built and natural environment affects human moods and behaviour could guide urban planning.

“It could allow stakeholders like developers, councils and governments to provide places in which people are not only healthier but also happier and more productive,” he said.

“Often architects are like artists and rely on gut feeling and experience.

“But evidence-based knowledge can be used to convince a builder that we need windows in a particular place and we have to also think about what people see when they look out of the windows.

“Potentially we might be able to say a certain environment leads to five less work errors in a week.”

Dr Baumann said bosses of the future might be able to tailor individual workstations to get the best from employees by looking at their type of work, personality and cognitive profile.

“You could get a profile of a person and their task and then determine what environment would be most optimal for their performance and wellbeing,” he said.

As for humans’ affinity with nature, Dr Baumann said a 300,000-year-old habit was hard to break.

“For me, the most convincing explanation is likely through evolution. Humans were hardwired to like blue spaces of water and green spaces,” he said.

The study is accessible here.