An Enjoyable Distraction During Exercise Augments the Positive Effects of Exercise on Mood

The hypothesis that an enjoyable distraction during exercise will augment the intensity of positive mood post-exercise was tested. A sample of 84 undergraduate students rated their mood and arousal before and after a standardized exercise, which consisted of walking on a treadmill at a pace of 3.6 m...

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Main Author: Gregory J. Privitera, Danielle E. Antonelli, Abigail L. Szal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Uludag 2014-06-01
Series:Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jssm.org/research.php?id=jssm-13-266.xml
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spelling doaj-700fdc52ba8a40e29367c4e8c87f2e442020-11-25T00:21:10ZengUniversity of UludagJournal of Sports Science and Medicine1303-29682014-06-01132266270An Enjoyable Distraction During Exercise Augments the Positive Effects of Exercise on MoodGregory J. Privitera, Danielle E. Antonelli, Abigail L. Szal0Department of Psychology, Saint Bonaventure University, St. Bonaventure, New York, USAThe hypothesis that an enjoyable distraction during exercise will augment the intensity of positive mood post-exercise was tested. A sample of 84 undergraduate students rated their mood and arousal before and after a standardized exercise, which consisted of walking on a treadmill at a pace of 3.6 mph for 10 minutes. During the work out session, participants watched the same television show, which they previously rated as enjoyable, or not enjoyable. As added controls, a third group exercised with no distraction (the TV was turned off); a fourth group did not exercise, but watched the television show. The results showed that exercise alone was sufficient to increase pleasant mood (95% CI 0.61, 1.46) and that including an enjoyable distraction during exercise significantly augmented pleasant mood compared to all other groups (95% CI 1.58, 2.99; R2 = 0.29). These results show that the enjoyment of a distraction is a key factor that can augment the intensity of positive mood following exercise.http://www.jssm.org/research.php?id=jssm-13-266.xmlDistractionexerciseaerobicmoodenjoyment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gregory J. Privitera, Danielle E. Antonelli, Abigail L. Szal
spellingShingle Gregory J. Privitera, Danielle E. Antonelli, Abigail L. Szal
An Enjoyable Distraction During Exercise Augments the Positive Effects of Exercise on Mood
Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Distraction
exercise
aerobic
mood
enjoyment
author_facet Gregory J. Privitera, Danielle E. Antonelli, Abigail L. Szal
author_sort Gregory J. Privitera, Danielle E. Antonelli, Abigail L. Szal
title An Enjoyable Distraction During Exercise Augments the Positive Effects of Exercise on Mood
title_short An Enjoyable Distraction During Exercise Augments the Positive Effects of Exercise on Mood
title_full An Enjoyable Distraction During Exercise Augments the Positive Effects of Exercise on Mood
title_fullStr An Enjoyable Distraction During Exercise Augments the Positive Effects of Exercise on Mood
title_full_unstemmed An Enjoyable Distraction During Exercise Augments the Positive Effects of Exercise on Mood
title_sort enjoyable distraction during exercise augments the positive effects of exercise on mood
publisher University of Uludag
series Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
issn 1303-2968
publishDate 2014-06-01
description The hypothesis that an enjoyable distraction during exercise will augment the intensity of positive mood post-exercise was tested. A sample of 84 undergraduate students rated their mood and arousal before and after a standardized exercise, which consisted of walking on a treadmill at a pace of 3.6 mph for 10 minutes. During the work out session, participants watched the same television show, which they previously rated as enjoyable, or not enjoyable. As added controls, a third group exercised with no distraction (the TV was turned off); a fourth group did not exercise, but watched the television show. The results showed that exercise alone was sufficient to increase pleasant mood (95% CI 0.61, 1.46) and that including an enjoyable distraction during exercise significantly augmented pleasant mood compared to all other groups (95% CI 1.58, 2.99; R2 = 0.29). These results show that the enjoyment of a distraction is a key factor that can augment the intensity of positive mood following exercise.
topic Distraction
exercise
aerobic
mood
enjoyment
url http://www.jssm.org/research.php?id=jssm-13-266.xml
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