98%
921
2 minutes
20
Sustaining physical activity is essential for long-term health benefits, yet most theory-driven interventions often show only short-lived effects. The reliance on effortful self-control may be critical for promoting behavioral maintenance and explaining why autonomous motivation and habit support long-term engagement in physical activity. This investigation was cross-sectional and examined whether effortful self-control is associated with physical activity behavior (Study 1) and whether it mediates the associations between autonomous motivation and habit with physical activity (Study 2). We also tested whether temptations mediate the associations between autonomous motivation and habit with effortful self-control. In Study 1, 897 adults completed a single-item measure of effortful self-control and self-reported moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA). In Study 2, 603 adults completed multi-item measures of effortful self-control, autonomous motivation, habit, and temptations, along with self-reported MVPA. In Study 1, higher effortful self-control was associated with lower MVPA, r = -.56, 95 % CI [-.61, -.51]. This association was replicated in Study 2, r = -.51, 95 % CI [-.58, -.44]. Mediation analyses showed that the relationships between autonomous motivation and habit with MVPA have a significant indirect effect through effortful self-control. Additionally, temptations partially mediated the associations between both motivational constructs and effortful self-control. These findings provide preliminary support for the role of effortful self-control as a psychological process linking autonomous motivation and habit with physical activity behavior. Reducing the amount of effortful self-control for physical activity, by strengthening motivation for physical activity and weakening temptations, may be a promising strategy to support sustained engagement in physical activity.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psychsport.2025.102926 | DOI Listing |
PLoS One
August 2025
Department of Psychology, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva, Israel.
Introduction: Children's externalizing problems in kindergarten are risk-factors that can explain psychopathology at adolescence and adulthood. Hence, it is important to study the complex and multiple-layer processes that might explain and reduce their occurrence. Among the most important moderating factors are parental caregiving practices, especially maternal sensitivity, which may depend on the parent's temperament and character.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Behav Addict
August 2025
1University Hospital of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Bern, Switzerland.
Background: Growing concerns regarding problematic gaming highlight the need for prospective longitudinal research to explore potential targets for prevention. Markers that can be observed during early adolescence, prior to the establishment of problematic behaviors, may be particularly informative. Two potential predictors of interest that have been shown to reflect important developmental and psychopathological processes are temperament and brain structure, which respectively provide self-reported and objective markers of individual differences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Psychopathol Clin Sci
August 2025
Department of Psychology, University of Michigan.
Difficulties with executive functioning are implicated in various forms of psychopathology. However, executive functioning task performance frequently demonstrates poor test-retest reliability, questionable convergent validity, and unstable associations with clinical measures. Model-based approaches may improve measurement by providing richer information about mechanisms underlying performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRespir Physiol Neurobiol
August 2025
Sport, Health and Performance Enhancement (SHAPE) Research Centre, Department of Sport Science, School of Science and Technology, Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham NG11 8NS, UK. Electronic address:
Introduction: Self-control reflects the effortful inhibition of attentional, behavioural, and emotional impulses to achieve a desired long-term goal. Prior self-control exertion does not affect air hunger and tolerance to progressive hypercapnia, but whether it affects the mechanistically distinct sense of breathing effort remains unknown.
Methods: Fourteen healthy young adults (13 males, 1 female) initially completed three familiarisation trials comprising an incremental inspiratory pressure-threshold loading (IPTL) test, which began at a load of 10 cmHO followed by a 10 cmHO increase every minute until task failure.
Front Psychol
July 2025
Centre de Recherches sur la Cognition et l'Apprentissage, Université de Poitiers, CNRS, Poitiers, France.
Introduction: A growing body of literature showed that mental fatigue induced by an effortful task leads to an impairment in a subsequent physical performance. The principal aim of this experimental study was to reproduce the effect of mental fatigue on endurance performance while investigating the effort deployment in the fatiguing and control tasks that precede the physical task.
Methods: Participants performed the following task sequence in a between-subjects design ( = 16 in each group): a time-to-exhaustion handgrip task at 13% of maximal voluntary contraction, a 30-min mental task (Stroop task or documentary watching task) and the handgrip task again.