Back to Search Start Over

Relationship between Self-Efficacy, Exercise Intensity, and Feeling States in a Sedentary Population during and Following an Acute Bout of Exercise

Authors :
Darren C. Treasure
David M. Newbery
Source :
Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology. 20:1-11
Publication Year :
1998
Publisher :
Human Kinetics, 1998.

Abstract

This study examined the relationship between self-efficacy, exercise intensity, and feeling states in a sedentary population during and following an acute bout of exercise. Sixty sedentary participants were randomly assigned to either a moderate-intensity (45-50% age predicted Heart Rate Reserve; HRR), high-intensity exercise (70-75% HRR) group, or a no-exercise attention control group. Participants in both exercise groups experienced changes in feeling states across the course of the exercise bout. The moderate-intensity group reported more positive and fewer negative feeling states both during and after exercise than the high-intensity group. Participants in both exercise conditions were significantly more positively engaged than the attention-control group postexercise. Consistent with social cognitive theory (Bandura, 1986, 1997), the reciprocal determined relationship between self-efficacy and feeling states was found to be strongest in the high intensity exercise condition.

Details

ISSN :
15432904 and 08952779
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7b042a060e7688df9639359ad3464656