Exploring Physical Activity Commitment and Lapses: A Comparison of Sport and Exercise Motives and Involvement Opportunities

This thesis aimed to determine which psychological factors enable adults to remain committed and to avoid lapses in physical activity (PA), and explored whether factors differed between sportspersons and exercisers. Three studies explored the importance of individual participatory motives (Markland...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vallerand, James
Language:en
Published: 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/26118
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OOU.#10393-26118
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OOU.#10393-261182014-06-14T03:49:59ZExploring Physical Activity Commitment and Lapses: A Comparison of Sport and Exercise Motives and Involvement OpportunitiesVallerand, JamesThis thesis aimed to determine which psychological factors enable adults to remain committed and to avoid lapses in physical activity (PA), and explored whether factors differed between sportspersons and exercisers. Three studies explored the importance of individual participatory motives (Markland & Ingledew, 1997), the total number of reasons motivating PA (Kruglanski et al., 2013) and the accommodation of involvement opportunities (Young & Medic, 2011), respectively. 252 (MAge = 47.2, SD = 6.0) active adults completed online questionnaires and self-identified as either being sportspersons or exercisers. Results show that greater number of motives, greater affordance of involvement opportunities, and three motives (enjoyment, stress relief, and social affiliation), facilitate commitment and lapse avoidance for sportspersons and exercisers alike. Sportspersons may also benefit from personal goals/challenges, but not from appearance motives. Overall, results indicated more similarities than differences between organized sport and exercise contexts for how motivational factors associated with adherence outcomes.2013-09-13T14:31:18Z2013-09-13T14:31:18Z20132013-09-13Thèse / Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10393/26118en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description This thesis aimed to determine which psychological factors enable adults to remain committed and to avoid lapses in physical activity (PA), and explored whether factors differed between sportspersons and exercisers. Three studies explored the importance of individual participatory motives (Markland & Ingledew, 1997), the total number of reasons motivating PA (Kruglanski et al., 2013) and the accommodation of involvement opportunities (Young & Medic, 2011), respectively. 252 (MAge = 47.2, SD = 6.0) active adults completed online questionnaires and self-identified as either being sportspersons or exercisers. Results show that greater number of motives, greater affordance of involvement opportunities, and three motives (enjoyment, stress relief, and social affiliation), facilitate commitment and lapse avoidance for sportspersons and exercisers alike. Sportspersons may also benefit from personal goals/challenges, but not from appearance motives. Overall, results indicated more similarities than differences between organized sport and exercise contexts for how motivational factors associated with adherence outcomes.
author Vallerand, James
spellingShingle Vallerand, James
Exploring Physical Activity Commitment and Lapses: A Comparison of Sport and Exercise Motives and Involvement Opportunities
author_facet Vallerand, James
author_sort Vallerand, James
title Exploring Physical Activity Commitment and Lapses: A Comparison of Sport and Exercise Motives and Involvement Opportunities
title_short Exploring Physical Activity Commitment and Lapses: A Comparison of Sport and Exercise Motives and Involvement Opportunities
title_full Exploring Physical Activity Commitment and Lapses: A Comparison of Sport and Exercise Motives and Involvement Opportunities
title_fullStr Exploring Physical Activity Commitment and Lapses: A Comparison of Sport and Exercise Motives and Involvement Opportunities
title_full_unstemmed Exploring Physical Activity Commitment and Lapses: A Comparison of Sport and Exercise Motives and Involvement Opportunities
title_sort exploring physical activity commitment and lapses: a comparison of sport and exercise motives and involvement opportunities
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/26118
work_keys_str_mv AT vallerandjames exploringphysicalactivitycommitmentandlapsesacomparisonofsportandexercisemotivesandinvolvementopportunities
_version_ 1716669644693045248