Reichert Markus, Tost Heike, Reinhard Iris, Zipf Alexander, Salize Hans-Joachim, Meyer-Lindenberg Andreas, Ebner-Priemer Ulrich W
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim, Heidelberg UniversityMannheim, Germany; Department of Sports and Sports Science, Karlsruhe Institute of TechnologyKarlsruhe, Germany.
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty Mannheim, Heidelberg University Mannheim, Germany.
Front Psychol. 2016 Jun 24;7:918. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00918. eCollection 2016.
A physically active lifestyle has been related to positive health outcomes and high life expectancy, but the underlying psychological mechanisms maintaining physical activity are rarely investigated. Tremendous technological progress yielding sophisticated methodological approaches, i.e., ambulatory assessment, have recently enabled the study of these mechanisms in everyday life. In practice, accelerometers allow to continuously and objectively monitor physical activity. The combination with e-diaries makes it feasible to repeatedly assess mood states in real-time and real life and to relate them to physical activity. This state-of-the-art methodology comes with several advantages, like bypassing systematic distortions of retrospective methods, avoiding distortions seen in laboratory settings, and revealing an objective physical activity assessment. Most importantly, ambulatory assessment studies enable to analyze how physical activity and mood wax and wane within persons over time in contrast to existing studies on physical activity and mood which mostly investigated between-person associations. However, there are very few studies on how mood dimensions (i.e., feeling well, energetic and calm) drive non-exercise activity (NEA; such as climbing stairs) within persons. Recent reviews argued that some of these studies have methodological limitations, e.g., scarcely representative samples, short study periods, physical activity assessment via self-reports, and low sampling frequencies. To overcome these limitations, we conducted an ambulatory assessment study in a community-based sample of 106 adults over 1 week. Participants were asked to report mood ratings on e-diaries and to wear an accelerometer in daily life. We conducted multilevel analyses to investigate whether mood predicted NEA, which was defined as the mean acceleration within the 10-min interval directly following an e-diary assessment. Additionally, we analyzed the effects of NEA on different time frames following the e-diary prompts in an exploratory manner. Our results revealed that valence significantly and positively predicted NEA within persons (p = 0.001). Feeling more energetic was associated with significantly increased NEA (p < 0.001), whereas feeling calmer was associated with significantly decreased NEA (p < 0.001) on the within-person level. The analyses on different time frames of NEA largely confirmed our findings. In conclusion, we showed that mood predicted NEA within adults but with distinct magnitudes and directions of effects for each mood dimension.
积极的生活方式与良好的健康状况和高预期寿命相关,但维持身体活动的潜在心理机制却很少被研究。近年来,巨大的技术进步带来了复杂的方法,即动态评估,使得在日常生活中研究这些机制成为可能。在实践中,加速度计可以持续、客观地监测身体活动。与电子日记相结合,使得在实时和现实生活中反复评估情绪状态并将其与身体活动联系起来成为可行。这种先进的方法具有几个优点,比如绕过回顾性方法的系统偏差,避免在实验室环境中出现的偏差,并提供客观的身体活动评估。最重要的是,与现有的大多研究身体活动和情绪之间个体间关联的研究相比,动态评估研究能够分析身体活动和情绪在个体内部如何随时间变化。然而,关于情绪维度(即感觉良好、精力充沛和平静)如何在个体内部驱动非运动活动(NEA,如爬楼梯)的研究非常少。最近的综述认为,其中一些研究存在方法学上的局限性,例如样本缺乏代表性、研究周期短、通过自我报告进行身体活动评估以及采样频率低。为了克服这些局限性,我们对106名成年人的社区样本进行了为期1周的动态评估研究。参与者被要求在电子日记上报告情绪评分,并在日常生活中佩戴加速度计。我们进行了多层次分析,以研究情绪是否能预测NEA,NEA被定义为在电子日记评估后紧接着的10分钟间隔内的平均加速度。此外,我们以探索性的方式分析了NEA在电子日记提示后的不同时间框架内的影响。我们的结果显示,效价在个体内部显著且正向地预测了NEA(p = 0.001)。在个体内部层面,感觉精力更充沛与NEA显著增加相关(p < 0.001),而感觉更平静与NEA显著减少相关(p < 0.001)。对NEA不同时间框架的分析在很大程度上证实了我们的发现。总之,我们表明情绪可以预测成年人的NEA,但每个情绪维度的影响大小和方向各不相同。