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The Effect of a Single Bout of Surfing on Exercise-Induced Affect

Exercise-induced affect (EIA) has been well documented and is often composed of positive affect, negative affect, tranquility, and fatigue. Research on EIA has focused on mainstream sports such as running, walking, or cycling; however, no research has evaluated the influence of action sports partici...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: PITTSINGER, RYAN, KRESS, JEFF, CRUSSEMEYER, JILL
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Berkeley Electronic Press 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5685081/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29170700
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author PITTSINGER, RYAN
KRESS, JEFF
CRUSSEMEYER, JILL
author_facet PITTSINGER, RYAN
KRESS, JEFF
CRUSSEMEYER, JILL
author_sort PITTSINGER, RYAN
collection PubMed
description Exercise-induced affect (EIA) has been well documented and is often composed of positive affect, negative affect, tranquility, and fatigue. Research on EIA has focused on mainstream sports such as running, walking, or cycling; however, no research has evaluated the influence of action sports participation in activities such surfing on EIA. The current study examined the effect of a single 30-min surfing bout on EIA in 107 adult volunteers. An additional purpose was if change in affect was similar based on surfing history, surfing frequency, and surfing skill level. To assess EIA, each participant completed the Physical Activity Affect Scale (PAAS) prior to and immediately following the 30-min surf session. Dependent t-tests were used to examine differences between pre- and post-test EIA. For the secondary purpose, a change score (PAAS posttest-PAAS pretest) was computed for each subscale. One-way ANOVAs were performed to determine differences among comparisons of surfing history, surfing frequency, and surfing skill level, and the change score for each of the 4 subscales. EIA was significantly altered by surfing, with significant improvements in positive affect and tranquility, and significant reductions in negative affect and fatigue. There were no significant differences among surfing history, surfing frequency, and surfing skill level, and positive affect, negative affect or tranquility. However, there were significant differences between fatigue and surfing history, surfing frequency, and surfing skill level. The results indicate that a single 30-min surfing bout may provide positive benefits for the participant. Implications for future surfing research and EIA are discussed.
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spelling pubmed-56850812017-11-21 The Effect of a Single Bout of Surfing on Exercise-Induced Affect PITTSINGER, RYAN KRESS, JEFF CRUSSEMEYER, JILL Int J Exerc Sci Original Research Exercise-induced affect (EIA) has been well documented and is often composed of positive affect, negative affect, tranquility, and fatigue. Research on EIA has focused on mainstream sports such as running, walking, or cycling; however, no research has evaluated the influence of action sports participation in activities such surfing on EIA. The current study examined the effect of a single 30-min surfing bout on EIA in 107 adult volunteers. An additional purpose was if change in affect was similar based on surfing history, surfing frequency, and surfing skill level. To assess EIA, each participant completed the Physical Activity Affect Scale (PAAS) prior to and immediately following the 30-min surf session. Dependent t-tests were used to examine differences between pre- and post-test EIA. For the secondary purpose, a change score (PAAS posttest-PAAS pretest) was computed for each subscale. One-way ANOVAs were performed to determine differences among comparisons of surfing history, surfing frequency, and surfing skill level, and the change score for each of the 4 subscales. EIA was significantly altered by surfing, with significant improvements in positive affect and tranquility, and significant reductions in negative affect and fatigue. There were no significant differences among surfing history, surfing frequency, and surfing skill level, and positive affect, negative affect or tranquility. However, there were significant differences between fatigue and surfing history, surfing frequency, and surfing skill level. The results indicate that a single 30-min surfing bout may provide positive benefits for the participant. Implications for future surfing research and EIA are discussed. Berkeley Electronic Press 2017-11-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5685081/ /pubmed/29170700 Text en
spellingShingle Original Research
PITTSINGER, RYAN
KRESS, JEFF
CRUSSEMEYER, JILL
The Effect of a Single Bout of Surfing on Exercise-Induced Affect
title The Effect of a Single Bout of Surfing on Exercise-Induced Affect
title_full The Effect of a Single Bout of Surfing on Exercise-Induced Affect
title_fullStr The Effect of a Single Bout of Surfing on Exercise-Induced Affect
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of a Single Bout of Surfing on Exercise-Induced Affect
title_short The Effect of a Single Bout of Surfing on Exercise-Induced Affect
title_sort effect of a single bout of surfing on exercise-induced affect
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5685081/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29170700
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