Does Body Mass Index Influence Behavioral Regulations, Dispositional Flow and Social Physique Anxiety in Exercise Setting?

Gözde Ersöz, Ersin Altiparmak, F Hülya Aşçı
Author Information
  1. Gözde Ersöz: Department of Physical Education and Sport Teaching, Namık Kemal University , Tekirdag, Turkey.
  2. Ersin Altiparmak: Department of Physical Education and Sport Teaching, Ege University , Izmir, Turkey.
  3. F Hülya Aşçı: Department of Physical Education and Sport Teaching, Marmara University , Istanbul, Turkey.

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to examine differences in behavioral regulations, dispositional flow, social physique Anxiety of exercisers in terms of body mass index (BMI). 782 university students participated in this study. Dispositional Flow State Scale-2, Behavioral Regulations in Exercise Questionnaire-2, Social Physique Anxiety Scale and Physical Activity Stages of Change Questionnaire were administered to participants. After controlling for gender, analysis indicated significant differences in behavioral regulations, dispositional flow and social physique Anxiety of exercise participants with regards to BMI. In summary, the findings demonstrate that normal weighted participants exercise for internal reasons while Underweighted participants are amotivated for exercise participation. Additionally, participants who are underweight had higher dispositional flow and lower social physique Anxiety scores than other BMI classification. Key pointsNormal weighted participants exercise for internal reasons.Underweighted participants are amotivated for exercise participation.Underweighted participants had higher dispositional flow.Underweighted participants have lower social physique Anxiety scores than normal weighted, overweight and obese participants.

Keywords

References

  1. Int J Eat Disord. 2002 Sep;32(2):179-85 [PMID: 12210660]
  2. J Health Psychol. 2007 Mar;12 (2):301-15 [PMID: 17284494]
  3. J Health Psychol. 2007 Mar;12(2):261-72 [PMID: 17284490]
  4. Span J Psychol. 2008 May;11(1):181-91 [PMID: 18630659]
  5. Percept Mot Skills. 1994 Apr;78(2):539-44 [PMID: 8022678]
  6. Psychol Health. 2010 Jan;25(1):89-110 [PMID: 20391209]
  7. Int J Behav Med. 2013 Mar;20(1):106-13 [PMID: 21953386]
  8. Circulation. 2007 Aug 28;116(9):1081-93 [PMID: 17671237]
  9. BMC Public Health. 2009 Jan 16;9:21 [PMID: 19149865]
  10. Percept Mot Skills. 1998 Apr;86(2):723-32 [PMID: 9638773]
  11. Scand J Med Sci Sports. 2007 Dec;17(6):703-19 [PMID: 17346291]
  12. Prev Med. 2004 Jul;39(1):182-90 [PMID: 15208001]
  13. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2010 Mar;7(3):784-98 [PMID: 20617003]
  14. Health Psychol. 1992;11(6):386-95 [PMID: 1286658]
  15. Am J Clin Nutr. 2002 May;75(5):809-17 [PMID: 11976153]
  16. Am Psychol. 2000 Jan;55(1):68-78 [PMID: 11392867]
  17. Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2007 Jun 08;4:25 [PMID: 17555603]
  18. Obes Rev. 2001 Aug;2(3):141-7 [PMID: 12120099]
  19. J Health Psychol. 2008 Jan;13(1):131-8 [PMID: 18086724]
  20. J Pers Soc Psychol. 1996 Jan;70(1):115-26 [PMID: 8558405]

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0participantsdispositionalflowsocialphysiqueanxietyexerciseregulationsBMIweightedUnderweightedstudydifferencesbehavioralbodymassindexDispositionalFlowBehavioralRegulationsExerciseSocialPhysiqueAnxietynormalinternalreasonsamotivatedparticipationhigherlowerscorespurposeexamineexercisersterms782universitystudentsparticipatedStateScale-2Questionnaire-2ScalePhysicalActivityStagesChangeQuestionnaireadministeredcontrollinggenderanalysisindicatedsignificantregardssummaryfindingsdemonstrateunderweightedAdditionallyunderweightclassificationKeypointsNormaloverweightobeseBodyMassIndexInfluenceSetting?Behavioralself-determinationtheory

Similar Articles

Cited By (2)