Backhouse Susan H, Ekkekakis Panteleimon, Bidle Stuart J H, Foskett Andrew, Williams Clyde
Carnegie Research Institute, Leeds Metropolitan University, England.
J Sport Exerc Psychol. 2007 Aug;29(4):498-517. doi: 10.1123/jsep.29.4.498.
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.
运动心理学文献中存在一个有趣的悖论,尽管并不常被讨论,它将两个结论并列在一起:(a)运动能让大多数人感觉更好;(b)大多数人身体不活跃或活动不足。在本文中,我们认为这可能是一种人为现象而非悖论。具体而言,我们对运动能让人感觉更好这一结论的普遍性提出质疑,理由如下:(a)偶尔出现的负面情绪变化往往被忽视;(b)潜在相关的负面情绪状态并非总是被测量;(c)考察运动前到运动后的变化可能会忽略运动过程中的负面变化;(d)仅在群体总体水平上分析变化可能会掩盖个体或亚组水平上的不同模式。一项针对12名男性的研究数据被用来阐述这些观点,该研究采用了一个90分钟的步行 - 跑步方案,旨在模拟体育比赛(如足球)的需求。