Cross-Institutional Survey of Mental Burden, Food Consumption Behavior, and Activity Engagement Distribution in South Asian University Youth: A Relational Occurrence Mapping Study
Keywords:
Mental burden, university youth, South Asia, dietary behaviorAbstract
This study examines the interrelated dynamics of mental burden, food consumption behavior, and activity engagement among university youth across South Asian institutions. In contemporary higher education environments, psychological distress and lifestyle imbalance have emerged as interconnected public health concerns, particularly within rapidly expanding academic systems. Prior research highlights that behavioral and psychosocial constructs in student populations are not isolated phenomena but are shaped through narrative, structural, and socio-cultural systems of interaction (Stornaiuolo & Thomas, 2018).
The present research employs a cross-institutional conceptual survey design to construct a relational occurrence mapping model, integrating mental burden, dietary behavior, and activity engagement as interdependent dimensions. Drawing from narrative empowerment frameworks, the study conceptualizes behavioral health not only as measurable activity but also as socially constructed meaning systems influencing student identity and coping mechanisms (Rappaport, 1995). Furthermore, computational and linguistic interface models provide a structural analogy for understanding behavioral data interpretation as a mapping process across heterogeneous institutional contexts (Androutsopoulos et al., 1995).
Findings derived from synthesis of interdisciplinary literature indicate that mental burden operates as a central organizing force that redistributes its influence across dietary and activity domains. High psychological strain is consistently associated with irregular food consumption patterns and reduced physical engagement, forming a self-reinforcing behavioral cycle. This pattern aligns with lifestyle triad frameworks, where stress, diet, and exercise interact as mutually dependent variables rather than independent factors (Renu Agarwal & BoopathyUsharani, 2026).
The study further identifies institutional variability across South Asian universities, suggesting that structural inequalities and socio-cultural differences significantly influence behavioral distributions. Narrative-based identity frameworks also reveal that student coping mechanisms are shaped by discursive environments, reinforcing the importance of contextual interpretation (Bamberg, 2004).
The study concludes that mental burden should be understood as a relational and distributive phenomenon embedded within behavioral ecosystems. Policy interventions must therefore move beyond isolated health strategies and adopt integrated frameworks addressing psychological, nutritional, and activity-based dimensions simultaneously.
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