| Literature DB >> 32904532 |
Fábio Hech Dominski1,2, Thiago Teixeira Serafim1, Thais Cristina Siqueira1, Alexandro Andrade1.
Abstract
Objective: This study aimed to review the existing literature concerning the psychological variables of CrossFit participants. Methodology: This review followed the PRISMA guidelines and was documented in the PROSPERO registry (CRD42018091177). Six electronic databases (SCOPUS, PubMed, SPORTDiscus, Web of Science, EMBASE, and Cochrane) were searched from their inception through July 2020. The methodological quality of the studies was assessed.Entities:
Keywords: High-intensity interval training; Mental health; Mood; Motivation; Sport psychology
Year: 2020 PMID: 32904532 PMCID: PMC7456358 DOI: 10.1007/s11332-020-00685-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sport Sci Health ISSN: 1824-7490
Eligibility criteria for inclusion of studies in a systematic review
| Inclusion | Exclusion | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| P | Participate | Any CrossFit participant | Participants of other types of physical exercise |
| I | Intervention | CrossFit | Massages, manual therapy, stretching, alternative therapies, weight training, walking or running, high-intensity interval training (HIIT) |
| C | Comparision | With healthy individuals or not, with groups of other physical exercises or control group without intervention | – |
| O | Outcome | Psychological aspects | – |
| S | Study | Cross-sectional, randomized and non-randomized | Case studies, review, meta-analysis |
Fig. 1Flow diagram illustrating literature research and selection process
Cross-sectional studies analyzing psychological variables of CrossFit participants (n = 20)
| References | Theme | Sample | Results | Adherence to the STROBE Criteria (total/%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caract./Gender | Age | |||||
| Partridge, Knapp and Massengale [ | Motivacional climate | 144 | Participants 56 men and 88 women | 34.4 | Males reported higher levels of performance approach goals and females reported higher levels of master avoidance goals (Mav). Participants who reported shorter membership times were found to have significantly higher mastery-related goals than individuals who reported longer membership times. Participants who reported shorter membership times (less than 6 months) were found to have significantly higher mastery-related goals than individuals who reported longer membership times (more than 6 months) | 13/59.1 |
| Martínez and Marmól [ | Effort, enjoyment and learning | 104 | Adolescents 62 boys and 42 girls | 14.7 | High effort perception in CrossFit classes. Adolescents showed high levels of enjoyment and learning perception after CrossFit practice. Boys perceive higher enjoyment and intensity than girls | 13/59.1 |
| Fisher et al. [ | Motivation | 314 | Participants 132 men and 182 women | 36 | CrossFit participants ( | 15/68.1 |
| Lichtenstein and Jensen [ | Exercise addiction | 598 | Participants 328 men and 270 women | Do not report | 5% of exercise addiction in CrossFit and young males showed a higher risk | 18/81.8 |
| Köteles, Kollsete, Kollsete [ | Well-being, self-esteem, body awareness, satisfaction with body image, and perceived body competence | 186 | Participants 57.5% Women | 28.9 | CrossFit training was not connected with higher levels of psychological functioning (well-being, affect, body awareness, and self-esteem) and satisfaction with body image | 15/68.1 |
| Davies, Coleman, and Stellino [ | Motivation | 206 | Participants 58% Women | 37.6 | Participants who attended CrossFit more frequently had significantly higher levels of basic need satisfaction across all three needs (autonomy, relatedness and competency). The sample reported high satisfaction in the relatedness and autonomy needs. Regarding the motivational regulations, the participants presented high autonomous regulation. 59.3% participants reported a 15 to 17 on Borg’s Rate of Perceived Exertion | 12/54.5 |
| Pickett et al. [ | Sense of Community | 276 | Participants 157 women and 117 men | 33.5 | The results indicated that sense of community was significantly different for the CrossFit group only. The CrossFit group rated their context higher across the dimensions of administrative consideration, equity in decision making, and social spaces. The CrossFit context did enable strong sense of community perceptions | 12/54.4 |
| Whiteman-Sandland, Hawkins, and Clayton [ | Social capital and Community belongingness | 100 | Participants 52 men and 48 women | Do not report | Social capital was found to be significantly higher in the CrossFit gym sample than in the Traditional gym sample. It was observed the same result to feelings of community belongingness | 19/83.3 |
| Bycura, Feito, and Prather [ | Motivation | 737 | Participants 388 men and 344 women | 32,4 | Revitalization, enjoyment, affiliation, and competition were all significantly correlated with both duration and frequency of participation in CrossFit training. Women were more likely to place greater emphasis on factors related to stress, weight management, and appearance compared to men, who placed greater importance on factors associated with challenge, social recognition, competition, strength and endurance, and nimbleness | 16/72.7 |
| Sibley and Bergman [ | Motivation | 322 | Participants 65.2% Men | 33.9 | Results showed that CrossFit participants primarily strive for goals related to health management and skill development, with physique enhancement and social affiliation being of secondary importance. The most frequent participants in CrossFit had significantly higher levels of basic needs satisfaction (autonomy, relatedness and competency) | 13/59.1 |
| Feito et al. [ | Motivation | 732 | Participants 388 men and 344 women | 32.3 | The results showed that individuals training < 3 days/week scored lowest on enjoyment, affiliation, and competition motives. Those training > 5 days/week scored highest on challenge, social recognition, strength and endurance, and nimbleness motives, but lowest on weight management | 18/81.8 |
| Ayar [ | Motivation | 200 | Participants 161 men and 39 women | Do not report | Differences have been found between motivation factors that affect individuals to participate in recreative sports and some of the demographical parameters in some variables of REMM’s health, rivalry, physical appearance, social/entertainment and skill development sub-dimensions Male participants attend to exercises in CrossFit centers with competitive reasons more than female participants | 8/36.3 |
| Marin et al. [ | Motivation | 493 | Participants 493 351 men and 148 women | 30.3 | Participants: 365 traditional resistance training and 128 CrossFit CrossFit participants presented higher levels of enjoyment, stress management, social recognition, affiliation, competition, and weight management. CrossFit participants showed higher intrinsic motivation and higher levels of perception of relatedness than resistance training participants | 16/72.7 |
| Box et al. [ | Motivation and Personality | 403 | Participants 148 men and 255 women | 36.3 | Participants: 89 CrossFit, 127 Resistance training, 97 Aerobic training, 59 Group exercise, 31 Sport It seemed that those who selected CrossFit training as their primary mode of physical activity reported stronger motivation across the majority of participatory motives in comparison to the other modes. CrossFit training participants reported the greatest levels of intrinsic motivation | 17/77.3 |
| Box et al. [ | Motivation | 735 | Participants 53.1% men | 32.4 | Older participants (> 50 years) scored higher on health-related motives, while younger participants (25–32 years) scored higher on social motives relative to their counterparts | 18/81.8 |
| Box et al. [ | Motivation | 722 | Participants 46.8% women | 32.4 | Those who had greater length of participation reported more motives associated with relatedness (i.e., affiliation, competition) and enjoyment, while those with less HIFT participation were more motivated by body-related variables (i.e., weight management) | 17/77.3 |
| Coyne, Sarah, Woodruff [ | Body image, self-esteem, and eating behaviours, motivation and reasons for practice CrossFit | 149 | Participants 149 women | 34.9 | CrossFit skill was positively associated with overall body image and evaluative body image. CrossFit length participation was negatively associated with disordered eating. No CrossFit variables were associated with global selfesteem. The most commonly mentioned motivations were improving/maintaining physical abilities, challenge, community, and mental health. The reasons most commonly mentioned to practice CrossFit were the community, sense of inclusion, programming, and challenge | 15/68.1% |
| Swami [ | Body Image | 63 | Participants 34 men and 29 women | 26.1 | The scores on body and functionality appreciation, and on body acceptance were significantly higher at the second testing session (after 3 months of CrossFit training compared with baseline). The largest improvements in body appreciation and functionality appreciation were achieved by participants who attended CrossFit classes regularly, ≥ 4 days a week compared to ≤ 3 days a week | 14/63.6% |
| Wilke, Pfarr, Moller [ | Anxiety and Coping | 79 | Athletes 36 men and 43 women | 32.7 | The results indicated substantial levels of anxiety, particularly regarding the somatic dimension of the competition fear index. The most pronounced coping skill was freedom of worry. Women reported higher competition fears and lower coping skill levels than men. Age or level of competition showed no/very small associations | 15/68.1% |
| Freire et al. [ | Body dissatisfaction, addiction to exercise, and eating disorders | 60 | Participants 22 men and 38 women | 26.5 | Individuals dissatisfied with their bodies showed higher level of addiction to exercise and risk behavior for EDs, women showed higher presence of body dissatisfaction than men. Fitness participants ( | 18/81.8 |
Psychological effects of CrossFit practice investigated in experimental (n = 10) and qualitative studies (n = 4)
| Experimental studies | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| References | Objective | Sample | Intervention | Results | Overall Testex | ||
| Caract./gender | Age | ||||||
| Heinrich et al. [ | To examine effects of HIFT as compared to moderate-intensity aerobic and resistance training (ART) on exercise initiation, enjoyment, adherence, and intentions | 23 | Sedentary 56.5% women | 26.8 | 8 weeks. Two groups: ART (moderate aerobic exercise each session and full-body resistance training on two sessions per week) and HIFT (CrossFit 60 min—WOD 5–30 min) | HIFT participants spent significantly less time exercising per week, yet were able to maintain exercise enjoyment and were more likely to intend to continue | 7 |
| Perciavalle et al. [ | To analyze the influences of blood lactate produced during a specific session of CrossFit® on intensity and selectivity of attention | 15 | Athletes Men | Do not report | WOD 15.5: 27–21–15–9 repetitions in term of Row (calories) and Thrusters | Reaction time, execution time, number of errors and number of omissions exhibited a significant worsening concomitantly with the increase in blood lactate | 3 |
| Eather, Morgan, Lubans [ | To investigate the effectiveness of the CrossFit™ Teens resistance training program for improving mental health outcomes in adolescents | 96 | Adolescents 51.5% women | 15 | Twice a week for 8 weeks. A typical session of CrossFit included: a dynamic warm-up (10 min), a technique-based skill session (10 min), a Workout of the Day (WOD = 10–20 min) and a stretching session (5 min) | There were no significant effects of the intervention on mental health in the full study sample | 14 |
| Drake et al. [ | To examine the magnitude and direction of the effects of short-term CrossFit participation on measures of health and fitness | 6 | Participants men | 25 | 4 weeks of CrossFit training (5 days for week with 1 h each session) | The effects on mood states of CrossFit practice were ranged from unclear to possibly harmful Possibly harmful small effects on overall Total Mood Disturbance | 8 |
| Woolf and Lawrence [ | To explore CrossFit participants’ social identity and athletic identity before and after members participated in CrossFit Open | 34 | Participants 62% women 38% men | 31.3 | CrossFit | The results indicated that participants strongly identify themselves as part of CrossFit | 4 |
| Box et al. [ | To observe whether any changes in six specific mood states occurred across a 5-week CrossFit Open competition or in response to each individual workout challenge | 8 | Participants 5 women and 3 men | 34.3 | CrossFit | No differences were observed between baseline and pre-workout mood states across the five weeks, indicating little effect of the unique competition design | 1 |
| Sławińska, Stolarski, Jankowski [ | To test whether impact of physical exercise on mood depends on time of day and chronotype | 94 | Participants 32 women and 62 men | 32 | A natural experimental. Two experimental conditions were distinguished—morning and evening hours | Participation in CrossFit training resulted in mood improvement consisting of increase in energetic arousal and hedonic tone and reduction of tense arousal. CrossFit training during morning hours boosted mood in the intermediate/evening chronotype group to the levels observed in morning chronotypes | 8 |
| Heinrich et al. [ | To compare the affective responses between HIFT and two commonly studied exercise modalities, HIIT and moderate continuous aerobic training (MCT) | 7 | Participants 5 women and 2 men | 20.6 | 3 randomly groups: MCT, HIIT, or HIFT. Nine total exercise sessions per group were scheduled across 3 consecutive weeks on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays | Perceived exertion increased across each modality but remained elevated following the cooldown period for only HIFT and HIIT. Inspection of the circumplex model of affect indicated that HIFT and HIIT shifted participants from a state of calmness to energy, whereas during MCT they remained in the calmness quadrant. The slope of the affective response to HIFT continued to increase in pleasure and arousal until the end of the workouts | 8 |
| Kolomiitseva et al. [ | To evaluate the effectiveness of using the CrossFit program as a physical activity based on a motivated choice in the process of physical education of students | 92 | Students and cadets Men | 17–18 | Two experimental (12 weeks with several WODs considering the rule more exercises—less rounds, less exercises—more rounds) and two control groups | The following motives for choosing CrossFit were pointed out: to adjust the body shape, make me more courageous and athletic, increase muscleʼ; ʼto increase my activity and vitalityʼ; ʼto improve my endurance, performance, reduce fatigue during physical loadsʼ | 5 |
| Pereira et al. [ | To evaluate the mood states of individuals trained and not trained in ECT, submitted to a training session of a high degree of physical effort | 20 | Participants men | 20–40 | Two groups: Trained ( | Trained group induced a significant reduction of the depression variable, in both moments. The trained group significantly increased vigor immediately after the end of the training session compared to the baseline. However, the conditioned group significantly reduced its vigor 30 min after the end, in comparison to the baseline | 4 |
Psychological variables, summary findings, and implications of the studies
| Psychological variable | Study | Summary findings | Implications* |
|---|---|---|---|
| Motivation | Partridge, Knapp and Massengale [ | Males reported higher levels of performance approach goals and females reported higher levels of master avoidance goals | Men and women; older and younger participants presented different goals related to the practice of CrossFit. Gender and other socio-demographic variables should be taken into account by coaches Aspects such as challenge and enjoyment of participants should be emphasized in CrossFit training, aiming for greater adherence and maintenance |
| Box et al. [ | Older participants scored higher on health motives while youngers on social motives | ||
| Box et al. [ | Relatedness and enjoyment pointed by those who had a greater length of participation as motives for practice | ||
| Fisher et al. [ | CrossFit participants presented intrinsic reasons for the practice | ||
| Ayar [ | Males reported more competitive reasons than female | ||
| Davies, Coleman, Stellino [ | CrossFit participants presented high autonomous regulation for the practice | ||
| Bycura, Feito, Prather [ | Revitalization, enjoyment, affiliation, and competition positively related to adherence and maintenance of the participants | ||
| Sibley and Bergman [ | Participants with higher frequency had higher levels of BPN satisfaction | ||
| Simpson et al. [ | Challenge, high intensity and community sense were pointed out as motivational factors | ||
| Enjoyment and learning | Martínez and Marmól [ | High levels of enjoyment and learning perception in adolescents who practiced CrossFit | CrossFit is a program that can also be used in Physical Education in Schools promoting benefits for adolescents |
| Kolomiitseva et al. [ | A significant improvement in the physical condition of the students and cadets was observed after CrossFit training | ||
| Effort | Davies, Coleman, Stellino [ | Participants evaluate CrossFit as a modality with high perception of effort | Possibility of using subjective perception of effort scale for evaluation of effort and optimization of training planning, also through knowledge of the internal training load |
| Martínez, Marmól [ | |||
| Drake et al. [ | |||
| Heinrich et al. [ | |||
| Exercise addiction | Lichtenstein and Jensen [ | 5% of prevalence of exercise addiction to CrossFit | Attention should be given to exercise addiction in CrossFit |
| Freire et al. [ | 80% of participants had low degree of addiction to exercise | ||
| Body Image | Coyne, Sarah, Woodruff [ | CrossFit skill positively predicted women’s body image | Self-perceived physical skill and/or fitness should be promoted. CrossFit’s use of strength training may be particularly effective in increasing body image CrossFit may be a viable intervention method for promoting positive body image |
| Swami [ | Participating in CrossFit is associated with improvements in body image | ||
| Freire et al. [ | A positive association of body dissatisfaction with risk behavior for eating disorders and addiction to exercise was observed | ||
| Well-being, body awareness, satisfaction with body image, and perceived body competence | Köteles, Kollsete, Kollsete [ | There was no relationship between the variables and the CrossFit training | Future investigations must be carried out regarding these variables |
| Self-esteem | Köteles, Kollsete, Kollsete [ | ||
| Eather, Morgan, Lubans [ | |||
| Coyne, Sarah, Woodruff [ | |||
| Anxiey and coping | Wilke, Pfarr, Moller [ | Competition fears are highly prevalent in athletes of CrossFit | |
| Mental health | Eather, Morgan, Lubans [ | There were no significant CrossFit effects on mental health | |
| Personality | Box et al. [ | The personality dimensions were not different among CrossFit and other groups of exercise | |
| Mood | Drake et al. [ | The effects on mood states of CrossFit practice were ranged from unclear to possibly harmful | |
| Box et al. [ | There were no significant changes in mood states across five weeks of CrossFit competition | ||
| Sławińska, Stolarski, Jankowski [ | Physical exercise strongly improves mood and that this effect depends on time of day and morningness–eveningness levels | ||
| Pereira et al. [ | Changes in mood states could be promoted by an extreme conditioning training session | ||
| Social variables and community belongingness | Whiteman-Sandland, Hawkins, Clayton [ | Greater social capital in CrossFit participants | Strong sense of community indicates a motivational factor to adherence of CrossFit regionally CrossFit’s organizational culture and sense of community can be explored as motivational factors and for greater adherence of participants to training |
| Pickett et al. [ | CrossFit group showed a higher sense of community | ||
| Woolf and Lawrence [ | Strong identification of participants as part of CrossFit | ||
| Bailey, Benson and Bruner [ | Strong sense of community by the participants | ||
| Exercise initiation, enjoyment, adherence | Heinrich et al. [ | Less time spent in the group that performed CrossFit with maintenance of enjoyment and more likely to continue | Less time spent in physical exercise favors adherence Explore motivational factors such as recording individual performance |
| Nielsen et al. [ | Reports of improvement in well-being and mood during intervention with CrossFit | ||
| Attention | Perciavalle et al. [ | Reaction time exhibited a significant worsening concomitantly with the increase in blood lactate | High levels of blood lactate can cause consequences in cognitive domains, caution is recommended in training components such as volume and intensity |
*Authors analysis