Exercise Makes People Feel Better but People are Inactive: Paradox or Artifact?

Author:

Backhouse Susan H.1,Ekkekakis Panteleimon2,Biddle Stuart J.H.3,Foskett Andrew4,Williams Clyde3

Affiliation:

1. 1Carnegie Research Institute, Leeds Metropolitan University

2. 2Iowa State University

3. 3Loughborough University

4. 4Massey University (Albany)

Abstract

The exercise psychology literature includes an intriguing, albeit not frequently discussed, paradox by juxtaposing two conclusions: (a) that exercise makes most people feel better and (b) that most people are physically inactive or inadequately active. In this article, we propose that this might be an artifact rather than a paradox. Specifically, we question the generality of the conclusion that exercise makes people feel better by proposing that (a) occasional findings of negative affective changes tend to be discounted, (b) potentially relevant negative affective states are not always measured, (c) examining changes from pre- to postexercise could miss negative changes during exercise, and (d) analyzing changes only at the level of group aggregates might conceal divergent patterns at the level of individuals or subgroups. Data from a study of 12 men participating in a 90-min walk–run protocol designed to simulate the demands of sports games (e.g., soccer) are used to illustrate these points.

Publisher

Human Kinetics

Subject

Applied Psychology

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