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Exercise as a reward: Self-paced exercise perception and delay discounting in comparison with food and money. / Albelwi, Tamam; Rogers, Robert; Kubis, Hans-Peter.
In: Physiology and Behavior, Vol. 199, 01.02.2019, p. 333-342.

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Albelwi T, Rogers R, Kubis HP. Exercise as a reward: Self-paced exercise perception and delay discounting in comparison with food and money. Physiology and Behavior. 2019 Feb 1;199:333-342. Epub 2018 Dec 4. doi: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2018.12.004

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Exercise as a reward

T2 - Self-paced exercise perception and delay discounting in comparison with food and money

AU - Albelwi, Tamam

AU - Rogers, Robert

AU - Kubis, Hans-Peter

PY - 2019/2/1

Y1 - 2019/2/1

N2 - Exercise is an important health behavior. Expressed reasons for participation are often delayed outcomes i.e. health threats and benefits, but also enjoyment. However, we do not know how people evaluate exercise as a reward. The value of rewards diminish the longer we have to wait for them and the discounting effect can undermine decision-making. Here, we investigated delay-discounting of exercise perception and its valuation with time delays; we conducted self-paced exercise sessions on treadmill and compared the discounting rates of exercise (kex) with those of established rewards of food (kfo) and money (km). Outcomes show, that young, moderately active participants (n = 70) preferred walking/running intensity with low to moderate cardiovascular strain and light perceived exertion. Delay discounting rates (k) indicated that exercise was discounted like other consumable rewards at the same rate as food and more rapidly than monetary rewards. Significant associations were detected of kex with preferred speed and with extrinsic exercise motivation. Exercise training (n = 16) reduced kex specifically, not affecting kfo. Our studies show, that participants perceived and discounted self-paced walking/running like a consumable reward. Exercise discounting was quicker in individuals who preferred lower speeds being less physically active and exercise training reduced the decay rate of exercise specifically.

AB - Exercise is an important health behavior. Expressed reasons for participation are often delayed outcomes i.e. health threats and benefits, but also enjoyment. However, we do not know how people evaluate exercise as a reward. The value of rewards diminish the longer we have to wait for them and the discounting effect can undermine decision-making. Here, we investigated delay-discounting of exercise perception and its valuation with time delays; we conducted self-paced exercise sessions on treadmill and compared the discounting rates of exercise (kex) with those of established rewards of food (kfo) and money (km). Outcomes show, that young, moderately active participants (n = 70) preferred walking/running intensity with low to moderate cardiovascular strain and light perceived exertion. Delay discounting rates (k) indicated that exercise was discounted like other consumable rewards at the same rate as food and more rapidly than monetary rewards. Significant associations were detected of kex with preferred speed and with extrinsic exercise motivation. Exercise training (n = 16) reduced kex specifically, not affecting kfo. Our studies show, that participants perceived and discounted self-paced walking/running like a consumable reward. Exercise discounting was quicker in individuals who preferred lower speeds being less physically active and exercise training reduced the decay rate of exercise specifically.

KW - Exercise

KW - Discounting

KW - Reward

KW - Motivation

KW - Perception

KW - Food

U2 - 10.1016/j.physbeh.2018.12.004

DO - 10.1016/j.physbeh.2018.12.004

M3 - Article

VL - 199

SP - 333

EP - 342

JO - Physiology and Behavior

JF - Physiology and Behavior

SN - 0031-9384

ER -