The Pleasure and Displeasure People Feel When they Exercise at Different Intensities

The public health problem of physical inactivity has proven resistant to research efforts aimed at elucidating its causes and interventions designed to alter its course. Thus, in most industrialized countries, the majority of the population is physically inactive or inadequately active. Most theoretical models of exercise behaviour assume that the decision to engage in exercise is based on cognitive factors (e.g. weighing pros and cons, appraising personal capabilities, evaluating sources of support). Another, still-under-appreciated, possibility is that these decisions are influenced by affective variables, such as whether previous exercise experiences were associated with pleasure or displeasure. This review examines 33 articles published from 1999 to 2009 on the relationship between exercise intensity and affective responses. Unlike 31 studies that were published until 1998 and were examined in a 1999 review, these more recent studies have provided evidence of a relation between the intensity of exercise and affective responses. Pleasure is reduced mainly above the ventilatory or lactate threshold or the onset of blood lactate accumulation. There are pleasant changes at sub-threshold intensities for most individuals, large inter-individual variability close to the ventilatory or lactate threshold and homogeneously negative changes at supra-threshold intensities. When the intensity is self-selected, rather than imposed, it appears to foster greater tolerance to higher intensity levels. The evidence of a doseresponse relation between exercise intensity and affect sets the stage for a reconsideration of the rationale behind current guidelines for exercise intensity prescription. Besides effectiveness and safety, it is becoming increasingly clear that the guidelines should take into account whether a certain level of exercise intensity would be likely to cause increases or decreases in pleasure.

[1]  C. Spielberger,et al.  Manual for the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory , 1970 .

[2]  M. Folstein,et al.  Reliability, validity, and clinical application of the visual analogue mood scale , 1973, Psychological Medicine.

[3]  Exercise for a Lifetime: An Educational Effort. , 1978, The Physician and sportsmedicine.

[4]  Effect of Fitness on Aging. , 1978, The Physician and sportsmedicine.

[5]  J H Wilmore,et al.  Plasma lactate accumulation and distance running performance. , 1979, Medicine and science in sports.

[6]  R. Dishman Health Psychology and Exercise Adherence , 1981 .

[7]  Rod K. Dishman,et al.  Compliance/adherence in health-related exercise. , 1982 .

[8]  J Dwyer,et al.  Heart rate indices of the anaerobic threshold. , 1983, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.

[9]  K Tanaka,et al.  Marathon performance, anaerobic threshold, and onset of blood lactate accumulation. , 1984, Journal of applied physiology: respiratory, environmental and exercise physiology.

[10]  J. Sallis,et al.  The determinants of physical activity and exercise. , 1985, Public health reports.

[11]  J F Sallis,et al.  Predictors of adoption and maintenance of physical activity in a community sample. , 1986, Preventive medicine.

[12]  G. Gleim,et al.  Using exercise respiratory measurements to compare methods of exercise prescription. , 1986, The American journal of cardiology.

[13]  William P. Morgan,et al.  Exercise and mental health , 1987 .

[14]  R. Thayer,et al.  Energy, tiredness, and tension effects of a sugar snack versus moderate exercise. , 1987, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[15]  L. Goldberg,et al.  Assessment of exercise intensity formulas by use of ventilatory threshold. , 1988, Chest.

[16]  Rod K. Dishman,et al.  Exercise Adherence: Its Impact on Public Health , 1988 .

[17]  D. Watson,et al.  Development and validation of brief measures of positive and negative affect: the PANAS scales. , 1988, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[18]  C. Hardy,et al.  Not What, but How One Feels: The Measurement of Affect during Exercise , 1989 .

[19]  R. Thayer The biopsychology of mood and arousal , 1989 .

[20]  R. Shephard,et al.  Therapeutic implications of exercise. , 1990 .

[21]  C. Bouchard,et al.  Determinants of participation in physical activity. , 1990 .

[22]  615 HOW MUCH EXERCISE IS ENOUGH , 1990 .

[23]  D. Saklofske,et al.  The effects of exercise and relaxation on energetic and tense arousal , 1992 .

[24]  S. Owen,et al.  A Comparison of Conventional Versus Anaerobic Threshold Exercise Prescription Methods in Subjects With Left Ventricular Dysfunction , 1993 .

[25]  Exercise psychology : the influence of physical exercise on psychological processes , 1993 .

[26]  T. Mcconnell,et al.  Gas Exchange Anaerobic Threshold: Implications for Prescribing Exercise in Cardiac Rehabilitation , 1993 .

[27]  W. Jack Rejeski,et al.  The Exercise-Induced Feeling Inventory: Development and Initial Validation , 1993 .

[28]  J. Dwyer Metabolic Character of Exercise at Traditional Training Intensities in Cardiac Patients and Healthy Persons , 1994 .

[29]  Jeremy N. Morris,et al.  Exercise in the prevention of coronary heart disease: today's best buy in public health. , 1994, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.

[30]  M. Bradley,et al.  Measuring emotion: the Self-Assessment Manikin and the Semantic Differential. , 1994, Journal of behavior therapy and experimental psychiatry.

[31]  Can the true effects of exercise on psychological variables be separated from placebo effects , 1994 .

[32]  K. Courneya,et al.  The Subjective Exercise Experiences Scale (SEES): Development and preliminary validation. , 1994 .

[33]  Using the exercise test to develop the exercise prescription in health and disease. , 1994, Primary care.

[34]  K. Cureton,et al.  Responses to preferred intensities of exertion in men differing in activity levels. , 1994, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.

[35]  Neil F. Gordon,et al.  Exercise intensity prescription in cardiovascular disease. Theoretical basis for anaerobic threshold determination. , 1995, Journal of cardiopulmonary rehabilitation.

[36]  Roger G. Eston,et al.  Kinanthropometry and Exercise Physiology Laboratory Manual: Tests, Procedures and Data , 1995 .

[37]  N. Pronk,et al.  Maximal exercise and acute mood response in women , 1995, Physiology & Behavior.

[38]  P. Thompson,et al.  ACSM's Guidelines for Exercise Testing and Prescription , 1995 .

[39]  M. Pratt,et al.  Physical activity and health , 1996, BMJ.

[40]  D. Poole,et al.  The Slow Component of Oxygen Uptake Kinetics in Humans , 1996, Exercise and sport sciences reviews.

[41]  D. Glenister Exercise and mental health: a review , 1996, Journal of the Royal Society of Health.

[42]  B. Fletcher,et al.  Adherence in the training levels comparison trial. , 1996, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.

[43]  S. Ward,et al.  The Physiology and Pathophysiology of Exercise Tolerance , 2012, Springer US.

[44]  B. Whipp Domains of Aerobic Function and Their Limiting Parameters , 1996 .

[45]  R. Dishman,et al.  Increasing physical activity: a quantitative synthesis. , 1996, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.

[46]  E. Ashley,et al.  Dangerous curves. A perspective on exercise, lactate, and the anaerobic threshold. , 1997, Chest.

[47]  E. Heath Borg's Perceived Exertion and Pain Scales , 1998 .

[48]  E. Acevedo,et al.  PERCEPTUAL RESPONSES AT RUNNING VELOCITIES PROXIMAL TO THE ONSET OF BLOOD LACTATE ACCUMULATION , 1998 .

[49]  Steven J. Petruzzello,et al.  Acute Aerobic Exercise and Affect , 1999, Sports medicine.

[50]  Comparison of Lactate and Ventilatory Threshold to Maximal Oxygen Consumption: A Meta-Analysis , 1999 .

[51]  T. Meyer,et al.  Is determination of exercise intensities as percentages of VO2max or HRmax adequate? , 1999, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.

[52]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  Throwing the mountains into the lakes: on the perils of nomothetic conceptions of the exercise-affect relationship. , 2000 .

[53]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  Analysis of the affect measurement conundrum in exercise psychology: I. Fundamental issues , 2000 .

[54]  Affective responses to exercise bouts of varying intensities , 2000 .

[55]  N. Kalin,et al.  Emotion, plasticity, context, and regulation: perspectives from affective neuroscience. , 2000, Psychological bulletin.

[56]  Edward McAuley,et al.  Exercise environment, self-efficacy, and affective responses to acute exercise in older adults , 2000 .

[57]  E. Deci,et al.  The "What" and "Why" of Goal Pursuits: Human Needs and the Self-Determination of Behavior , 2000 .

[58]  Elaine A. Rose,et al.  The Effect of Prescribed and Preferred Intensity Exercise on Psychological Affect and the Influence of Baseline Measures of Affect , 2000, Journal of health psychology.

[59]  Biopsychological, affective and cognitive responses to acute physical activity. , 2001, The Journal of sports medicine and physical fitness.

[60]  B. Hatfield,et al.  Temporal Dynamics and Dimensional Specificity of the Affective Response to Exercise of Varying Intensity: Differing Pathways to a Common Outcome , 2001 .

[61]  P. Greenland,et al.  Accuracy of estimating exercise prescription intensity in patients with left ventricular systolic dysfunction. , 2001, Journal of cardiopulmonary rehabilitation.

[62]  George Kuk,et al.  The effects of low and high intensity exercise on emotions, stress and effort , 2001 .

[63]  Richard J. Davidson,et al.  The neural circuitry of emotion and affective style: prefrontal cortex and amygdala contributions , 2001 .

[64]  R. Dishman The Problem of Exercise Adherence: Fighting Sloth in Nations With Market Economies , 2001 .

[65]  Regional brain activation as a biological marker of affective responsivity to acute exercise: influence of fitness. , 2001 .

[66]  J. Spence,et al.  Feeling state responses to acute exercise of high and low intensity. , 2001, Journal of science and medicine in sport.

[67]  Patrick J O'Connor,et al.  Emotional responsiveness after low- and moderate-intensity exercise and seated rest. , 2002, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.

[68]  E. McAuley,et al.  Self-efficacy effects on feeling states in women , 2002, International journal of behavioral medicine.

[69]  S. Anton,et al.  Adherence to exercise prescriptions: effects of prescribing moderate versus higher levels of intensity and frequency. , 2002, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.

[70]  J. Annesi Effects of Differing Durations and Intensities of Cardiovascular Exercise on Aversion and Feeling States in New Women Exercisers , 2002, Perceptual and motor skills.

[71]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  The affective beneficence of vigorous exercise revisited. , 2002, British journal of health psychology.

[72]  R. Davidson Anxiety and affective style: role of prefrontal cortex and amygdala , 2002, Biological Psychiatry.

[73]  Steven J. Petruzzello,et al.  Analysis of the affect measurement conundrum in exercise psychology: IV. A conceptual case for the affect circumplex , 2002 .

[74]  P. Rispens,et al.  Individual assessment of intensity-level for exercise training in patients with coronary artery disease is necessary. , 2002, International journal of cardiology.

[75]  J. Spence,et al.  Moderators of the Exercise/Feeling‐State Relationship: The Influence of Self‐Efficacy, Baseline, and In‐Task Feeling States at Moderate‐ and High‐Intensity Exercise , 2002 .

[76]  The influence of exercise intensity and physical activity history on state anxiety after exercise. , 2002 .

[77]  Adrian Bauman,et al.  Trends in physical activity participation and the impact of integrated campaigns among Australian adults, 1997–99 , 2003, Australian and New Zealand journal of public health.

[78]  P. Ekkekakis Pleasure and displeasure from the body: Perspectives from exercise , 2003, Cognition & emotion.

[79]  A. Daley,et al.  Subjective exercise experiences during and after high and low intensity exercise in active and inactive adult females. Some preliminary findings. , 2003, The Journal of sports medicine and physical fitness.

[80]  Effect of Exertional Trend during Cycle Ergometry on Postexercise Affect , 2003, Research quarterly for exercise and sport.

[81]  R. Lutz,et al.  The role of relative autonomy in post-exercise affect responding. , 2003 .

[82]  Brian R MacIntosh,et al.  Anaerobic threshold: the concept and methods of measurement. , 2003, Canadian journal of applied physiology = Revue canadienne de physiologie appliquee.

[83]  L. Beilin,et al.  Controlled comparison of retention and adherence in home- vs center-initiated exercise interventions in women ages 40-65 years: The S.W.E.A.T. Study (Sedentary Women Exercise Adherence Trial). , 2003, Preventive medicine.

[84]  H. Hausenblas,et al.  State Anxiety Responses to Acute Exercise in Women with High Social Physique Anxiety , 2003 .

[85]  A. Daley,et al.  The Effects of Low and Moderate Intensity Exercise on Subjective Experiences in a Naturalistic Health and Fitness Club Setting , 2003, Journal of health psychology.

[86]  Eric E Hall,et al.  Practical markers of the transition from aerobic to anaerobic metabolism during exercise: rationale and a case for affect-based exercise prescription. , 2004, Preventive medicine.

[87]  Adrian Bauman,et al.  Twenty-year trends in physical activity among Canadian adults. , 2004, Canadian journal of public health = Revue canadienne de sante publique.

[88]  A. Bauman,et al.  Twenty-year Trends in Physical Activity Among Canadian Adults , 2004 .

[89]  Carl Foster,et al.  Consistency of the talk test for exercise prescription. , 2004, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.

[90]  G. Bell,et al.  Does Equating Total Volume of Work between Two Different Exercise Conditions Matter When Examining Exercise-Induced Feeling States? , 2004, Research quarterly for exercise and sport.

[91]  R. Cox,et al.  Effects of Acute 60 and 80% VO2max Bouts of Aerobic Exercise on State Anxiety of Women of Different Age Groups across Time , 2004, Research quarterly for exercise and sport.

[92]  P. Freedson,et al.  Validity of the relative percent concept for equating training intensity , 1978, European Journal of Applied Physiology and Occupational Physiology.

[93]  E. McAuley,et al.  Exercise Intensity and Self-Efficacy Effects on Anxiety Reduction in Healthy, Older Adults , 1999, Journal of Behavioral Medicine.

[94]  Stella M. Yu Healthy People 2010 , 1998, Maternal and Child Health Journal.

[95]  Steven J. Petruzzello,et al.  Walking in (Affective) Circles: Can Short Walks Enhance Affect? , 2000, Journal of Behavioral Medicine.

[96]  P. Ekkekakis Exercise and Affect – the Study of Affective Responses to Acute Exercise : The Dual-mode Model Exercise and Affect – the Study of Affective Respon ses to Acute Exercise : The Dual-mode Model , 2004 .

[97]  Applications in Sports Biomechanics: Sensitivity of Optimum Performance , 2004 .

[98]  Affective Responses to a Graded Exercise Test on a Recumbent Bicycle: When do I Start Feeling Bad? , 2004 .

[99]  Affect Responses to Acute Bouts of Aerobic Exercise: A Test of Opponent-Process Theory , 2004 .

[100]  Comparing Exercise Bouts of Differing Intensities and Durations on Post-Exercise Mood , 2004 .

[101]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  Variation and homogeneity in affective responses to physical activity of varying intensities: An alternative perspective on dose – response based on evolutionary considerations , 2005, Journal of sports sciences.

[102]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  Some like It Vigorous: Measuring Individual Differences in the Preference for and Tolerance of Exercise Intensity , 2005 .

[103]  Wilfried Kindermann,et al.  An alternative approach for exercise prescription and efficacy testing in patients with chronic heart failure: a randomized controlled training study. , 2005, American heart journal.

[104]  C. Earnest,et al.  A conceptual framework for performance diagnosis and training prescription from submaximal gas exchange parameters--theory and application. , 2005, International journal of sports medicine.

[105]  J. Newsom,et al.  The health consciousness myth: implications of the near independence of major health behaviors in the North American population. , 2005, Social science & medicine.

[106]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  What intensity of physical activity do previously sedentary middle-aged women select? Evidence of a coherent pattern from physiological, perceptual, and affective markers. , 2005, Preventive medicine.

[107]  Ross C Brownson,et al.  Declining rates of physical activity in the United States: what are the contributors? , 2005, Annual review of public health.

[108]  R. Stelter,et al.  New Approaches to Sport and Exercise Psychology , 2005 .

[109]  Affect Responses to Acute Bouts of Aerobic Exercise in Fit and Unfit Participants: An Examination of Opponent-Process Theory , 2006 .

[110]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  Exercise does not feel the same when you are overweight: the impact of self-selected and imposed intensity on affect and exertion , 2006, International Journal of Obesity.

[111]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  Psychobiology of Physical Activity , 2006 .

[112]  H. Hausenblas,et al.  Exercising in Public and Private Environments: Effects on Feeling States in Women with Social Physique Anxiety , 2006 .

[113]  B. Saltin,et al.  Evidence for prescribing exercise as therapy in chronic disease , 2006, Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports.

[114]  Effects of Acute Bouts of Aerobic Exercise of Varied Intensity on Subjective Mood Experiences in Women of Different Age Groups across Time , 2006 .

[115]  Deniz S. Ones,et al.  The effect of acute aerobic exercise on positive activated affect: A meta-analysis , 2006 .

[116]  Viability of Resting Electroencephalograph Asymmetry as a Predictor of Exercise-Induced Affect: A Lack of Consistent Support , 2006 .

[117]  Elaine A. Rose,et al.  The psychological and physiological responses of sedentary individuals to prescribed and preferred intensity exercise. , 2006, British journal of health psychology.

[118]  Affective Responses to Acute Exercise: Toward a Psychobiological Dose-Response Model. , 2006 .

[119]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  Can Self-Reported Preference for Exercise Intensity Predict Physiologically Defined Self-Selected Exercise Intensity? , 2006, Research quarterly for exercise and sport.

[120]  A. Bauman,et al.  Long-term changes in leisure time walking, moderate and vigorous exercise: were they influenced by the National Physical Activity Guidelines? , 2006, Journal of science and medicine in sport.

[121]  Shauna M. Burke,et al.  Exercising with others exacerbates the negative effects of mirrored environments on sedentary women's feeling states , 2007 .

[122]  J. Bartholomew,et al.  Affective responses to exercise are dependent on intensity rather than total work. , 2007, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.

[123]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  Regional brain activity and strenuous exercise: Predicting affective responses using EEG asymmetry , 2007, Biological Psychology.

[124]  U. Ekelund,et al.  Temporal trends in physical activity in England: the Health Survey for England 1991 to 2004. , 2007, Preventive medicine.

[125]  Effects of self-efficacy on physical activity enjoyment in college-agedwomen , 2007, International journal of behavioral medicine.

[126]  Elaine A. Rose,et al.  A quantitative analysis and qualitative explanation of the individual differences in affective responses to prescribed and self-selected exercise intensities. , 2007, Journal of sport & exercise psychology.

[127]  Carrie Ferguson,et al.  Affective responses of inactive women to a maximal incremental exercise test: A test of the dual-mode model , 2007 .

[128]  Ryan E Rhodes,et al.  Evidence-informed physical activity guidelines for Canadian adults. , 2007, Canadian journal of public health = Revue canadienne de sante publique.

[129]  S. Wininger Improvement of affect following exercise: Methodological artifact or real finding? , 2007, Anxiety, stress, and coping.

[130]  H. Soya,et al.  Threshold-like pattern of neuronal activation in the hypothalamus during treadmill running: Establishment of a minimum running stress (MRS) rat model , 2007, Neuroscience Research.

[131]  Clyde Williams,et al.  Exercise makes people feel better but people are inactive: paradox or artifact? , 2007, Journal of sport & exercise psychology.

[132]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  Biofeedback in Exercise Psychology , 2007 .

[133]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  Psychobiology and Behavioral Strategies Can Self-Reported Tolerance of Exercise Intensity Play a Role in Exercise Testing ? , 2007 .

[134]  A. Bauman,et al.  Physical activity and public health: updated recommendation for adults from the American College of Sports Medicine and the American Heart Association. , 2007, Circulation.

[135]  G. Kamimori,et al.  STRESS HORMONES,EFFORT SENSE, AND PERCEPTIONS OF STRESS DURING INCREMENTAL EXERCISE: AN EXPLORATORY INVESTIGATION , 2007, Journal of strength and conditioning research.

[136]  Donna P. Scales,et al.  Social environmental factors and psychological responses to acute exercise for socially physique anxious females , 2007 .

[137]  Swapan Mookerjee,et al.  Cerebral oxygenation declines at exercise intensities above the respiratory compensation threshold , 2007, Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology.

[138]  Stéphane Perrey,et al.  Prefrontal cortex oxygenation and neuromuscular responses to exhaustive exercise. , 2007 .

[139]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  The Affective Impact of Exercise Intensity That Slightly Exceeds the Preferred Level , 2008, Journal of health psychology.

[140]  David M Williams,et al.  Acute Affective Response to a Moderate-intensity Exercise Stimulus Predicts Physical Activity Participation 6 and 12 Months Later. , 2008, Psychology of sport and exercise.

[141]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  Do regression-based computer algorithms for determining the ventilatory threshold agree? , 2008, Journal of sports sciences.

[142]  G. Parfitt,et al.  Can the feeling scale be used to regulate exercise intensity? , 2008, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.

[143]  Carl Foster,et al.  The Talk Test as a Marker of Exercise Training Intensity , 2008, Journal of cardiopulmonary rehabilitation and prevention.

[144]  S. Wininger,et al.  The effects of music preference and exercise intensity on psychological variables. , 2008, Journal of music therapy.

[145]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  The Relationship Between Exercise Intensity and Affective Responses Demystified: To Crack the 40-Year-Old Nut, Replace the 40-Year-Old Nutcracker! , 2008, Annals of behavioral medicine : a publication of the Society of Behavioral Medicine.

[146]  David M Williams Exercise, affect, and adherence: an integrated model and a case for self-paced exercise. , 2008, Journal of sport & exercise psychology.

[147]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  The Preference for and Tolerance of the Intensity of Exercise Questionnaire: A psychometric evaluation among college women , 2008, Journal of sports sciences.

[148]  G. Parfitt,et al.  Acute affective responses to prescribed and self-selected exercise intensities in young adolescent boys and girls. , 2008, Pediatric exercise science.

[149]  A. Cohen-Solal,et al.  Methodological approach to the first and second lactate threshold in incremental cardiopulmonary exercise testing , 2008, European journal of cardiovascular prevention and rehabilitation : official journal of the European Society of Cardiology, Working Groups on Epidemiology & Prevention and Cardiac Rehabilitation and Exercise Physiology.

[150]  G. Parfitt,et al.  PATTERNING OF PHYSIOLOGICAL AND AFFECTIVE RESPONSES DURING A GRADED EXERCISE TEST IN SEDENTARY MEN AND BOYS , 2008 .

[151]  E. D. Geus,et al.  A genetic perspective on the association between exercise and mental health. , 2008 .

[152]  Stéphane Perrey,et al.  Non-invasive NIR spectroscopy of human brain function during exercise. , 2008, Methods.

[153]  Susan H. Backhouse,et al.  Walking is popular among adults but is it pleasant? A framework for clarifying the link between walking and affect as illustrated in two studies , 2008 .

[154]  P. Ekkekakis The genetic tidal wave finally reached our shores: Will it be the catalyst for a critical overhaul of the way we think and do science? , 2008 .

[155]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  Illuminating the black box: investigating prefrontal cortical hemodynamics during exercise with near-infrared spectroscopy. , 2009, Journal of sport & exercise psychology.

[156]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  AFFECTIVE CONSEQUENCES OF IMPOSING THE INTENSITY OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY: DOES THE LOSS OF PERCEIVED AUTONOMY MATTER? , 2009 .

[157]  P. Ekkekakis Let Them Roam Free? , 2009, Sports medicine.

[158]  W. Bertucci,et al.  Telic dominance influences affective response to a heavy-intensity 10-min treadmill running session , 2009, Journal of sports sciences.

[159]  S. Blair Physical inactivity: the biggest public health problem of the 21st century. , 2009, British journal of sports medicine.

[160]  A. Dunn,et al.  Affect, exercise, and physical activity among healthy adolescents. , 2009, Journal of sport & exercise psychology.

[161]  B. Focht Brief Walks in Outdoor and Laboratory Environments , 2009, Research quarterly for exercise and sport.

[162]  D. Warburton,et al.  Characteristics of Physical Activity Guidelines and their Effect on Adherence , 2009, Sports medicine.

[163]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  Do ‘Mind over Muscle’ Strategies Work? , 2009, Sports medicine.

[164]  Dan J. Graham,et al.  Personality, physical fitness, and affective response to exercise among adolescents. , 2009, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.

[165]  Bethany M. Kwan,et al.  In-task and post-task affective response to exercise: translating exercise intentions into behaviour. , 2010, British journal of health psychology.

[166]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  Affective Responses to Increasing Levels of Exercise Intensity in Normal‐weight, Overweight, and Obese Middle‐aged Women , 2010, Obesity.