Revisiting the Exercise Imagery and Exercise Dependence Relationship

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Revisiting the Exercise Imagery and Exercise Dependence Relationship. / Divine, Alison; Roberts, Ross; Hall, Craig.
In: International Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology, 27.04.2016.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Divine, A, Roberts, R & Hall, C 2016, 'Revisiting the Exercise Imagery and Exercise Dependence Relationship', International Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology.

APA

Divine, A., Roberts, R., & Hall, C. (2016). Revisiting the Exercise Imagery and Exercise Dependence Relationship. International Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology.

CBE

Divine A, Roberts R, Hall C. 2016. Revisiting the Exercise Imagery and Exercise Dependence Relationship. International Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology.

MLA

Divine, Alison, Ross Roberts and Craig Hall. "Revisiting the Exercise Imagery and Exercise Dependence Relationship". International Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology. 2016.

VancouverVancouver

Divine A, Roberts R, Hall C. Revisiting the Exercise Imagery and Exercise Dependence Relationship. International Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology. 2016 Apr 27.

Author

Divine, Alison ; Roberts, Ross ; Hall, Craig. / Revisiting the Exercise Imagery and Exercise Dependence Relationship. In: International Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology. 2016.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Revisiting the Exercise Imagery and Exercise Dependence Relationship

AU - Divine, Alison

AU - Roberts, Ross

AU - Hall, Craig

PY - 2016/4/27

Y1 - 2016/4/27

N2 - The present study examined the relationship between exercise imagery and exercise dependence, building on the limitations of previous work that has considered exercise dependence as a single factor construct. Examining the relationship between imagery and separate exercise dependence symptoms is vital to expand what is known about exercise dependence, but also to inform interventions to address exercise dependence. A total of 339 male (n = 99) and female (n = 240) adults completed measures of exercise dependence and imagery. Structural Equation Modeling revealed that different types of imagery were related to different exercise dependence symptoms. Appearance and health imagery were positively associated with tolerance, reduction in other activities, and lack of control symptoms. Routines imagery was positively associated with intention effects, whereas technique imagery was negatively associated with intention effects. Feelings imagery was positively associated with withdrawal symptoms of exercise dependence. These differential effects highlight the importance of considering exercise dependence multidimensionally; in particular, patterns of exercise imagery use may have important implications for interventions aimed at reducing/preventing exercise dependence.

AB - The present study examined the relationship between exercise imagery and exercise dependence, building on the limitations of previous work that has considered exercise dependence as a single factor construct. Examining the relationship between imagery and separate exercise dependence symptoms is vital to expand what is known about exercise dependence, but also to inform interventions to address exercise dependence. A total of 339 male (n = 99) and female (n = 240) adults completed measures of exercise dependence and imagery. Structural Equation Modeling revealed that different types of imagery were related to different exercise dependence symptoms. Appearance and health imagery were positively associated with tolerance, reduction in other activities, and lack of control symptoms. Routines imagery was positively associated with intention effects, whereas technique imagery was negatively associated with intention effects. Feelings imagery was positively associated with withdrawal symptoms of exercise dependence. These differential effects highlight the importance of considering exercise dependence multidimensionally; in particular, patterns of exercise imagery use may have important implications for interventions aimed at reducing/preventing exercise dependence.

KW - Imagery

KW - Exercise dependence

KW - Excessive

M3 - Article

JO - International Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology

JF - International Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology

SN - 1612-197X

ER -