Does affective valence during and immediately following a 10-min walk predict concurrent and future physical activity?
- PMID: 22532005
- PMCID: PMC5718347
- DOI: 10.1007/s12160-012-9362-9
Does affective valence during and immediately following a 10-min walk predict concurrent and future physical activity?
Abstract
Background: Affect may be important for understanding physical activity behavior.
Purpose: To examine whether affective valence (i.e., good/bad feelings) during and immediately following a brief walk predicts concurrent and future physical activity.
Methods: At months 6 and 12 of a 12-month physical activity promotion trial, healthy low-active adults (N=146) reported affective valence during and immediately following a 10-min treadmill walk. Dependent variables were self-reported minutes/week of lifestyle physical activity at months 6 and 12.
Results: Affect reported during the treadmill walk was cross-sectionally (month 6: β=28.6, p=0.008; month 12: β=26.6, p=0.021) and longitudinally (β=14.8, p=0.030) associated with minutes/week of physical activity. Affect reported during a 2-min cool down was cross-sectionally (month 6: β=21.1, p=0.034; month 12: β=30.3, p<0.001), but not longitudinally associated with minutes/week of physical activity. Affect reported during a postcool-down seated rest was not associated with physical activity.
Conclusions: During-behavior affect is predictive of concurrent and future physical activity behavior.
Conflict of interest statement
Comment in
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Doing what feels good (and avoiding what feels bad)--a growing recognition of the influence of affect on exercise behavior: a comment on Williams et al.Ann Behav Med. 2012 Aug;44(1):7-9. doi: 10.1007/s12160-012-9374-5. Ann Behav Med. 2012. PMID: 22610473 No abstract available.
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