The Pleasure and Displeasure People Feel When they Exercise at Different Intensities
暂无分享,去创建一个
[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.
[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.