Publication | Closed Access
Increasing the Pleasure and Enjoyment of Exercise: A Novel Resistance-Training Protocol
32
Citations
40
References
2020
Year
Physical ActivityRt IntensityExercise MedicineNovel Resistance-training ProtocolStrength TrainingExercise PsychologyExercise RehabilitationKinesiologyExercisePhysical ExerciseApplied PhysiologyDecreasing PleasureClinical ExerciseSport ScienceHealth SciencesDanceUp ConditionPhysical FitnessClinical Exercise PhysiologyRehabilitationExercise ScienceExercise PhysiologyHuman MovementAthletic TrainingExercise Interventions
This study was designed to test the effect of an increasing- (UP) or decreasing-intensity (DOWN) resistance-training (RT) protocol on the pleasure and enjoyment of RT. The participants (N = 40; mean age = 35.0 ± 9.2 years) completed two RT sessions comprising 3 × 10 repetitions of six exercises. In the UP condition, load progressively increased from 55% to 75% of 1-repetition maximum, while in the DOWN condition, this pattern was reversed (i.e., 75-55% 1-repetition maximum). The DOWN condition resulted in more overall pleasure compared with UP and a slope of increasing pleasure, while the UP condition resulted in decreasing pleasure. Enjoyment of RT, postexercise pleasure, and remembered pleasure were all significantly greater for DOWN compared with UP (all ps > .01). These findings suggest that decreasing RT intensity throughout an exercise bout can elicit a positive slope of pleasure and enhance affective evaluations of exercise.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1