Effects of virtual reality-enhanced exercise equipment on adherence and exercise-induced feeling states.

J J Annesi, J Mazas
Author Information
  1. J J Annesi: Rutgers, State University of New Jersey, USA.

Abstract

A field study was conducted to test the effectiveness of virtual reality-enhanced cardiovascular exercise equipment for increasing adherence and attendance in a mixed-sex adult sample. Attendance was significantly higher in the virtual reality-enhanced condition than in the conditions without virtual reality over the 14-wk. period. Adherence was also highest (83.33%) in the virtual-reality bicycle group. Postexercise feelings of positive engagement, revitalization, tranquility, and physical exhaustion, as measured by the Exercise-induced Feeling Inventory, did not differ among groups. Contrary to previous findings, Self-motivation Inventory scores were not associated with either attendance or adherence. While findings suggest that virtual-reality features may promote exercise adherence or attendance, it is not yet known what psychological variables they affect. Implications were drawn regarding the practical possibilities for exercise promotion.

MeSH Term

Adult
Computer Simulation
Equipment Design
Exercise
Female
Health Behavior
Health Promotion
Humans
Male
Motivation
Personality Inventory
Physical Fitness
User-Computer Interface

Word Cloud

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