The Acute Relationships Between Affect, Physical Feeling States, and Physical Activity in Daily Life: A Review of Current Evidence.

Front Psychol

Department of Preventive Medicine, Institute for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Research, University of Southern California Los Angeles, CA, USA.

Published: January 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Most previous studies on the link between emotions and physical activity were done in labs, making them less applicable to real-life situations.
  • A review of 14 studies in everyday settings found that positive feelings increased the likelihood of physical activity soon after, while negative feelings showed no significant relationship.
  • The review also indicated that engaging in physical activity generally boosts positive feelings in the hours following exercise, but evidence on its effect in reducing negative emotions was less clear. Future research should improve participant diversity and use better assessment methods to understand these relationships further.

Article Abstract

Until recently, most studies investigating the acute relationships between affective and physical feeling states and physical activity were conducted in controlled laboratory settings, whose results might not translate well to everyday life. This review was among the first attempts to synthesize current evidence on the acute (e.g., within a few hours) relationships between affective and physical feeling states and physical activity from studies conducted in free-living, naturalistic settings in non-clinical populations. A systematic literature search yielded 14 eligible studies for review. Six studies tested the relationship between affective states and subsequent physical activity; findings from these studies suggest that positive affective states were positively associated with physical activity over the next few hours while negative affective states had no significant association. Twelve studies tested affective states after physical activity and yielded consistent evidence for physical activity predicting higher positive affect over the next few hours. Further, there was some evidence that physical activity was followed by a higher level of energetic feelings in the next few hours. The evidence for physical activity reducing negative affect in the next few hours was inconsistent and inconclusive. Future research in this area should consider recruiting more representative study participants, utilizing higher methodological standards for assessment (i.e., electronic devices combined with accelerometry), reporting patterns of missing data, and investigating pertinent moderators and mediators (e.g., social and physical context, intensity, psychological variables). Knowledge gained from this topic could offer valuable insights for promoting daily physical activity adoption and maintenance in non-clinical populations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4688389PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01975DOI Listing

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