| Literature DB >> 23641221 |
Martina K Kanning1, Ulrich W Ebner-Priemer, Wolfgang Michael Schlicht.
Abstract
Several meta-analyses have investigated the association between physical activity and affective states and have found evidence suggesting that exercise exerts a positive effect on affective state. However, in this field of research, most studies have conducted between-subject analyses. Nonetheless, there is more and more interest in the within-subject associations between physical activity and momentary affective states in everyday life. This position statement pertains to this up-and-coming field of research and provides methodological recommendations for further studies. The paper is divided into three parts: first, we summarize and evaluate three methodological requirements necessary for the proper evaluation of within-subject associations between physical activity and momentary affective states in everyday life. We propose that the following issues should be considered: (a) to address the dynamic nature of such relationships, repeated assessments are necessary; (b) as activities performed in everyday life are mostly spontaneous and unconscious, an objective assessment of physical activity is useful; (c) given that recall of affective states is often affected by systematic distortions, real-time assessment is preferable. In sum, we suggest the use of ambulatory assessment techniques, and more specifically the combination of accelerometer-assessment of physical activity with an electronic diary assessment of the momentary affective state and additional context information. Second, we summarize 22 empirical studies published between 1980 and 2012 using ambulatory assessment to investigate within-subject associations between momentary affective states and physical activity in everyday life. Generally, the literature overview detects a positive association, which appears stronger among those studies that were of high methodological quality. Third, we propose the use of ambulatory assessment intervention (AAIs) strategies to change people's behavior and to enable people to be active as often as possible during the day (e.g., reducing sitting time, taking more steps per day).Entities:
Keywords: affective states; ambulatory assessment; ecological momentary assessment; methodological requirements; physical activity
Year: 2013 PMID: 23641221 PMCID: PMC3638123 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00187
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Distinction between within-subject and between-subjects relationships in major research topics and assessment approaches.
aPA was assessed objectively and affective states were assessed electronically.
| Reference | Aim of the study | Sample | Procedures | Measurements | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical activity | Affective states | |||||
| Axelson et al. ( | Pilot study: testing feasibility to perform ambulatory assessment with symptomatic patients with pediatric disorders | 16 Children with affective disorders (major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, bipolar disorders) + 5 healthy controls, 9 girls, 12 boys, 10–17 years ( | Five extended weekends, Pbn received telephone calls – 12 calls between 4:00 p.m. (Friday) and 10:00 p.m. (Monday) | Self-report + accelerometer: ActiGraph, on wrist, 60 s epoch | Subset of PANAS-C, four positive (happy, joyful, exited, energetic) and four negative items (sad, angry, nervous, upset) | Performing ambulatory assessment for real-time experience sampling is feasible in symptomatic patients with pediatric affective disorders. Statistical analyses were not performed |
| Dunton et al. ( | To determine whether leisure time physical activity levels and experiences differ across social and physical contexts among children | 121 Children (62 male), 9–13 years | 4 days (Friday 4:00 p.m. to Monday 8:30 p.m. – not during school hours) random time within seven pre-established intervals, mobile phone, electronic diary | Accelerometer: ActiGraph (7164 GT2M), right hip, 30 s epoch | Electronic diary; positive affect: happy + joyful, negative affect: sad, angry, stressed, anxious | Affect differed during physical activity across physical and social contexts: greater ratings of positive affect when physically active outdoors, greater ratings of negative affect when physically active alone and with family only |
| Grossman et al. ( | To compare activity and mood between post-treatment breast cancer patients and matched control females | 33 Post-treatment breast cancer patients + 33 healthy controls, age: | One weekday, every 50 min during awake hours | Accelerometer: LifeShirt | Electronic diary; mood (happy, sad, angry, anxious) | Activity did not differ between groups. Cancer patients were less happy across the day than healthy controls. Averaged accelerometry activity was correlated with mean self-reported energy and happiness |
| Kanning et al. ( | To analyze the effect of actual physical activity, autonomous regulation mode, and their interaction on affective states | 44 University students (21 female), age: | One weekday, every 45 min between 8:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m. | Accelerometer: Varioport-e, right hip, 60 s epoch | Electronic diary; short scale; six bipolar adjectives measuring valence, energetic arousal, and calmness | Actual physical activity, autonomous regulation mode, and their interaction significantly influenced affective states |
| Powell et al. ( | To explore the associations of negative and positive affect with activity levels using ecological momentary assessment | 25 Individuals (36% female), 46–85 years old ( | 2-day study, diary sounded an alarm every 90–120 min from 9:00 a.m. until the participants went to bed | Self-report: computerized diary records, objective activity assessment: accelerometer: Vitaport 3, on trunk (lower part of sternum) and thighs | Electronic diary; positive affect; cheerful, negative affect; irritable, depressed, anxious, frustrated; PANAS on the following day | Walking time and dynamic activity was associated with lower negative affect. More activity was also associated with higher positive affect, however only the correlation of self-reported walking time with PANAS positive affect reached significance |
| Schwerdtfeger et al. ( | Is there a correlation between everyday life physical activity and psychological well-being? | 124 Volunteers (64 females), 18–73 years old | 12 h Study on a typical workday, averaged bodily movement across four time windows (1, 1–5, 1–15, 1–30 min before assessment of affect) | Accelerometer: ActiGraph (GT1M), on left ankle | Electronic diary; adopted version (German version) of PANAS and AD-ACL to assess positive and negative affect | Daily physical activity episodes were associated with positive affective states not with negative affective states |
| Schwerdtfeger et al. ( | To examine whether momentarily assessed affect and bodily movement in everyday life are mutually associated | 124 Volunteers (64 females), 18–73 years old | 12 h Study on a typical workday, averaged bodily movement across four time windows (1, 1–5, 1–15, 1–30 min before and after assessment of affect) | Accelerometer: ActiGraph (GT1M), on left ankle | Electronic diary; adopted version (German version) of PANAS and AD-ACL to assess positive and negative affect | Affective states and physical activity in every day life were mutually associated |
Either aPA was assessed objectively or affective states were assessed electronically.
| Reference | Aim of the study | Sample | Procedure | Measurements | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical activity | Affective states | |||||
| Dunton et al. ( | To identify cognitive, social, affective, contextual, and physiological antecedents and correlates of physical activity episodes across the day among adults age 50+ years | 23 Healthy, community-dwelling older adults (70% female) who did not engage in regular PA, age: | Four times a day (fixed interval measurement schedule) across a 2-week period, electronic diaries | Self-report: Pbn were asked whether and how long they had performed each of 12 different types of moderate-to-vigorous activities (MVPA) | Electronic diary; eight different types of emotion (emotionally upset, stressed, lonely, annoyed, tense, sad, frustrated, happy) were assessed with a bipolar scale | Greater levels of positive affect ( |
| McCormick et al. ( | To identify if physical activity level is useful in predicting transitory mood in the everyday lives of people with severe mental illness (SMI) | Individuals with SMI suffer for more than 2 years from severe mental disorders (e.g., bipolar disorder, major depression, schizophrenia). 15 Serbians (age: | Two communities, 7 days, seven times a day (9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.), stratified random schedule | Accelerometer: MTI (7164), right hip, 60 s epoch | Self-report: pager and booklet; positive and negative mood were assessed via dichotomously scored (y/n) mood items: happy, secure, cheerful, bored anxious, angry | Physical activity remained significantly positively associated with mood after accounting for individual variation |
| Rofey et al. ( | Discussion about a pilot study, primarily regarding utilization of ambulatory assessment | 20 English Speaking participants, 11–19 years old; BMI | 14 Cellular phone calls over three extended weekends, they were called twice on weekdays and four times on weekends | Self-report: Pbn reported their physical activity during phone calls | Structured interview to evaluate affect, via phone call | Technological devices that gather objective data have reasonably high compliance rates, and inform measurement of treatment outcomes in adolescents who are obese |
| Vansteelandt et al. ( | To assess if there is a positive association between patients’ drive for thinness and their level of physical activity across time | 32 Female inpatients with an eating disorder, 15–37 years old | 1 Week, nine times a day, stratified random Schedule | Self-report: electronic diary, three items referring to type and intensity | Electronic diary; PANAS | Drive for thinness as well as positive emotional states are both, significantly related to patients physical activity. Negative emotional state was not significantly associated with physical activity |
aPa was not assessed objectively, nor were affective states assessed electronically.
| Reference | Aim of the study | Sample | Procedures | Measurements | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical activity | Affective states | |||||
| Bohnert et al. ( | To assess if more involvement in active structured discretionary activities would be associated with fewer depressive symptoms and delinquency To assess if positive effect mediate these relationship | 246 Urban African American adolescents, 107 boys, 139 girls, 10–15 years | 1 Week/seven times a day | Self-report: pager and booklet; open-ended question “what were you doing?” | Booklet: how were you feeling? – bipolar scale with the following pairs of adjectives: happy – unhappy, weak – strong, angry – friendly, awake – tired, cheerful – grouchy/cranky | Contrary to the expectations, results suggest that involvement in structured discretionary time activities was not associated with less depressive symptoms and delinquency. But more time spent in these activities was positively associated with positive affect |
| Carels et al. ( | To assess the influence of morning mood on exercise, intensity, and duration To assess the effect of exercise intensity and duration on post-exercise mood enhancement | 51 Adults (89% female), 31–65 years, | During the first 4 and the final 4 weeks of a weight loss intervention program participants completed an exercise and mood diary. Participants reported morning, evening, pre- and post-exercise mood, as well as the type, intensity, and duration of exercise | Self-report, booklet: type, duration, intensity | Booklet: feeling scale (single item) | Morning mood was associated with an increased likelihood of exercising; morning mood was not a significant predictor of exercise intensity and duration. Mood ratings were higher following exercise of greater intensity and duration |
| Focht et al. ( | To examine feeling state fluctuations in older, obese adults with knee osteoarthritis throughout the day and in response to an acute bout of physical activity | 32 Clinically obese, sedentary adults (25 female) over 60 years of age ( | 6 Days, 8:00 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., stratified random schedule; days were divided in three exercise and three non-exercise days | Exercise sessions (11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.) for all participants, walking phase 50–70% of heart rate reserve | Pager and booklet; Exercise-Induced Feeling Inventory (EFI) | Affective states did not change with involvement in acute exercise |
| Gauvin and Szabo ( | To examine the effects of 1-week exercise withdrawal on daily positive and negative affect | 12 Experimental and 9 control subjects (14 male), age: | 5 Weeks, four times a day (fixed interval measurement schedule); experimental group: participants were asked to stop exercising on day 15 until day 21 | Physical activity was not measured during experimental period | Pager and booklet; four positive and five negative affective states: happy, pleased, joyful, enjoyment, unhappy, depressed, blue, angry, frustrated, anxious; and two additional indicators: stressed, relaxed | Exercise withdrawal had no significant impact on positive and negative affect |
| Gauvin et al. ( | To describe changes in affect and feeling states in a community sample of physically active women after acute bouts of vigorous physical activity | 108 Women attending fitness classes at local YMCAs; 86 participants (age: | 6 Weeks, four times a day, pager signal at random intervals between 8:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m., additional before and after physical activity bouts lasting 20 min or longer | Self-report: pager and booklet; vigorous (e.g., fitness class or brisk walk) versus light (e.g., leisurely walk or yoga) physical activity | Booklet; affective states were measured with (1) positive affects: happy, pleased, joyful, experience of enjoyment-fun; negative affect: depressed-blue, worried-anxious, frustrated, unhappy, angry-hostile and (2) with Exercise-Induced Feeling Inventory (EFI) | Involvement in physical activity was associated with increases in tranquility, revitalization, and positive affect, and decreases in negative affect. Between-subjects variables did not systematically moderate pre-activity to post-activity changes in mood |
| Gauvin et al. ( | To examine diurnal patterns of feeling states in a community sample of physically active women on days that they were either active of inactive | 84 Physically active women from local YMCAs, 19–57 years old | 6 Weeks, four times a day at random intervals between 8:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m., additional experience sampling questionnaires before and after physical activity bouts lasting 20 min | Self-report: pager and booklet; participants wrote down what they were doing, when responding to the pager call, or before/after exercise | Booklet; Exercise-Induced Feeling Inventory (EFI) | Scores for positive engagement, revitalization, and tranquility assessed following exercise were significantly higher than values recorded at the same time on inactive days |
| Hausenblas et al. ( | To determine if deprivation from exercise resulted in variations in feeling states | 40 University students (26 female), age: | 6-Day study, three exercise + three non-exercise days, three times a day (9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.), in addition: immediately before and following exercise | Self-report: pager and booklet; Leisure Time Exercise Questionnaire (LTEQ) | Booklet; Exercise-Induced Feeling Inventory (EFI) | Acute exercise resulted in improved feeling states |
| Kanning and Schlicht ( | To analyze if physically active episodes are associated with more positive mood compared with episodes of inactivity | 13 Participants 52–59 years old (9 female) | 10-Week period, one to three self-selected episodes per day during their daily routine (defined as occurrences with a definite start/end) | Self-report: booklet; activity described by the participants (strolling around, reading etc.) | Booklet; German-language Multidimensional Mood Questionnaire (MDBF) | When activity increased, valence, energetic arousal, and calmness also increased |
| LePage and Crowther ( | To assess if low trait body dissatisfied individuals will exhibit less state body dissatisfaction and negative affect and more positive affect following exercise than at other times throughout the day | 61 Female undergraduate university students, age: | 10 Days, four times throughout the day and following exercise | Self-report; pager and booklet, questions assessing type and amount of exercise | Booklet; ten items of the PANAS-X | Individuals reported less negative affect after exercising than at random assessments |
| Vendrig and Lousberg ( | An initial effort to examine within person relationships among pain intensity, mood, and activity level of chronic pain patients using experience sampling method | 57 (31 Females) chronic pain patients, 21–65 years old | 6 Days/eight times a day, between 8:30 a.m. and 10:30 p.m. (Tuesday–Sunday). one booklet per day | Self-report: pager and booklet; single item scoring activity intensity: 1 = rest, 2 = lying down, 3 = doing nothing to 7 = heavy physical work | Single item: seven point Likert scale, very negative mood to very positive mood | There was no significant relation between activity level and mood |
| Wichers et al. ( | To examine the subtle hour-to-hour fluctuations in affect in relation to increases in physical activity in the flow of daily life | 504 Female twins, 18–46 years old; | Five consecutive days, ten times a day, between 7:30 and 22:30, stratified random schedule | Self-report: pager and booklet; single item scoring activity intensity from 1 (e.g., resting) to 7 (e.g., running) | Booklet; PANAS | Significant increase in positive affect following the moment of increase in physical activity was replicated across both samples up to 180 min after physical activity. There was no effect of physical activity on negative affect |