3 results match your criteria: "University of Kent at Medway Chatham[Affiliation]"
Front Psychol
May 2016
Endurance Research Group, School of Sport and Exercise Sciences, University of Kent at Medway Chatham, England.
Self-control is considered broadly important for many domains of life. One of its unfortunate features, however, is that it tends to wane over time, with little agreement about why this is the case. Recently, there has been a push to address this problem by looking to the literature in exercise physiology, specifically the work on the central governor model of physical fatigue.
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March 2015
Laboratoire INSERM U1093, Faculté des Sciences du Sports - UFR Staps, Université de Bourgogne Dijon, France.
It has been shown that the mental fatigue induced by prolonged self-regulation increases perception of effort and reduces performance during subsequent endurance exercise. However, the physiological mechanisms underlying these negative effects of mental fatigue are unclear. The primary aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that mental fatigue exacerbates central fatigue induced by whole-body endurance exercise.
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October 2014
Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale U1093, Faculty of Sport Sciences, University of Burgundy Dijon, France.
Mental exertion is known to impair endurance performance, but its effects on neuromuscular function remain unclear. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that mental exertion reduces torque and muscle activation during intermittent maximal voluntary contractions of the knee extensors. Ten subjects performed in a randomized order three separate mental exertion conditions lasting 27 min each: (i) high mental exertion (incongruent Stroop task), (ii) moderate mental exertion (congruent Stroop task), (iii) low mental exertion (watching a movie).
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