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Mood Dimensions Show Distinct Within-Subject Associations With Non-exercise Activity in Adolescents: An Ambulatory Assessment Study

Physical activity is known to preserve both physical and mental health. However, the physical activity levels of a large proportion of adolescents are insufficient. This is critical, since physical activity levels in youth have been shown to translate into adulthood. Whereas in adult populations, mo...

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Autores principales: Koch, Elena D., Tost, Heike, Braun, Urs, Gan, Gabriela, Giurgiu, Marco, Reinhard, Iris, Zipf, Alexander, Meyer-Lindenberg, Andreas, Ebner-Priemer, Ulrich W., Reichert, Markus
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5850094/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29563889
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00268
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author Koch, Elena D.
Tost, Heike
Braun, Urs
Gan, Gabriela
Giurgiu, Marco
Reinhard, Iris
Zipf, Alexander
Meyer-Lindenberg, Andreas
Ebner-Priemer, Ulrich W.
Reichert, Markus
author_facet Koch, Elena D.
Tost, Heike
Braun, Urs
Gan, Gabriela
Giurgiu, Marco
Reinhard, Iris
Zipf, Alexander
Meyer-Lindenberg, Andreas
Ebner-Priemer, Ulrich W.
Reichert, Markus
author_sort Koch, Elena D.
collection PubMed
description Physical activity is known to preserve both physical and mental health. However, the physical activity levels of a large proportion of adolescents are insufficient. This is critical, since physical activity levels in youth have been shown to translate into adulthood. Whereas in adult populations, mood has been supposed to be one important psychological factor that drives physical activity in everyday life, this issue has been poorly studied in adolescent populations. Ambulatory Assessment is the state-of-the-art approach to investigate how mood and non-exercise activity fluctuate within persons in everyday life. Through assessments in real time and real life, this method provides ecological validity, bypassing several limitations of traditional assessment methods (e.g., recall biases). To investigate whether mood is associated with non-exercise activity in adolescents, we equipped a community-based sample comprising 113 participants, aged 12–17 years, with GPS-triggered e-diaries querying for valence, energetic arousal, and calmness, and with accelerometers continuously measuring physical activity in their everyday lives for 1 week. We excluded all acceleration data due to participants' exercise activities and thereafter we parameterized non-exercise activity as the mean value across 10-min intervals of movement acceleration intensity following each e-diary prompt. We used multilevel analyses to compute the effects of the mood dimensions on non-exercise activity within 10-min intervals directly following each e-diary prompt. Additionally, we conducted explorative analyses of the time course of the effects, i.e., on different timeframes of non-exercise activity up to 300 min following the mood assessment. The results showed that valence (p < 0.001) and energetic arousal (p < 0.001) were positively associated with non-exercise activity within the 10 min interval, whereas calmness (p < 0.001) was negatively associated with non-exercise activity. Specifically, adolescents who felt more content, full of energy, or less calm were more physically active in subsequent timeframes. Overall, our results demonstrate significant associations of mood with non-exercise activity in younger ages and converge with the previously observed association between mood and physical activity in adults. This knowledge on distinct associations of mood-dimensions with non-exercise activity may help to foster physical activity levels in adolescents.
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spelling pubmed-58500942018-03-21 Mood Dimensions Show Distinct Within-Subject Associations With Non-exercise Activity in Adolescents: An Ambulatory Assessment Study Koch, Elena D. Tost, Heike Braun, Urs Gan, Gabriela Giurgiu, Marco Reinhard, Iris Zipf, Alexander Meyer-Lindenberg, Andreas Ebner-Priemer, Ulrich W. Reichert, Markus Front Psychol Psychology Physical activity is known to preserve both physical and mental health. However, the physical activity levels of a large proportion of adolescents are insufficient. This is critical, since physical activity levels in youth have been shown to translate into adulthood. Whereas in adult populations, mood has been supposed to be one important psychological factor that drives physical activity in everyday life, this issue has been poorly studied in adolescent populations. Ambulatory Assessment is the state-of-the-art approach to investigate how mood and non-exercise activity fluctuate within persons in everyday life. Through assessments in real time and real life, this method provides ecological validity, bypassing several limitations of traditional assessment methods (e.g., recall biases). To investigate whether mood is associated with non-exercise activity in adolescents, we equipped a community-based sample comprising 113 participants, aged 12–17 years, with GPS-triggered e-diaries querying for valence, energetic arousal, and calmness, and with accelerometers continuously measuring physical activity in their everyday lives for 1 week. We excluded all acceleration data due to participants' exercise activities and thereafter we parameterized non-exercise activity as the mean value across 10-min intervals of movement acceleration intensity following each e-diary prompt. We used multilevel analyses to compute the effects of the mood dimensions on non-exercise activity within 10-min intervals directly following each e-diary prompt. Additionally, we conducted explorative analyses of the time course of the effects, i.e., on different timeframes of non-exercise activity up to 300 min following the mood assessment. The results showed that valence (p < 0.001) and energetic arousal (p < 0.001) were positively associated with non-exercise activity within the 10 min interval, whereas calmness (p < 0.001) was negatively associated with non-exercise activity. Specifically, adolescents who felt more content, full of energy, or less calm were more physically active in subsequent timeframes. Overall, our results demonstrate significant associations of mood with non-exercise activity in younger ages and converge with the previously observed association between mood and physical activity in adults. This knowledge on distinct associations of mood-dimensions with non-exercise activity may help to foster physical activity levels in adolescents. Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-03-07 /pmc/articles/PMC5850094/ /pubmed/29563889 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00268 Text en Copyright © 2018 Koch, Tost, Braun, Gan, Giurgiu, Reinhard, Zipf, Meyer-Lindenberg, Ebner-Priemer and Reichert. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Psychology
Koch, Elena D.
Tost, Heike
Braun, Urs
Gan, Gabriela
Giurgiu, Marco
Reinhard, Iris
Zipf, Alexander
Meyer-Lindenberg, Andreas
Ebner-Priemer, Ulrich W.
Reichert, Markus
Mood Dimensions Show Distinct Within-Subject Associations With Non-exercise Activity in Adolescents: An Ambulatory Assessment Study
title Mood Dimensions Show Distinct Within-Subject Associations With Non-exercise Activity in Adolescents: An Ambulatory Assessment Study
title_full Mood Dimensions Show Distinct Within-Subject Associations With Non-exercise Activity in Adolescents: An Ambulatory Assessment Study
title_fullStr Mood Dimensions Show Distinct Within-Subject Associations With Non-exercise Activity in Adolescents: An Ambulatory Assessment Study
title_full_unstemmed Mood Dimensions Show Distinct Within-Subject Associations With Non-exercise Activity in Adolescents: An Ambulatory Assessment Study
title_short Mood Dimensions Show Distinct Within-Subject Associations With Non-exercise Activity in Adolescents: An Ambulatory Assessment Study
title_sort mood dimensions show distinct within-subject associations with non-exercise activity in adolescents: an ambulatory assessment study
topic Psychology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5850094/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29563889
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00268
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