Exercise, physical activity, and self-determination theory: A systematic review

Altice Portugal (Portugal) · University of Lisbon · +2 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

Motivation is a critical factor in supporting sustained exercise, which in turn is associated with important health outcomes. Accordingly, research on exercise motivation from the perspective of self-determination theory (SDT) has grown considerably in recent years. Previous reviews have been mostly narrative and theoretical. Aiming at a more comprehensive review of empirical data, this article examines the empirical literature on the relations between key SDT-based constructs and exercise and physical activity behavioral outcomes.

Methods

This systematic review includes 66 empirical studies published up to June 2011, including experimental, cross-sectional, and prospective studies that have measured exercise causality orientations, autonomy/need support and need satisfaction, exercise motives (or goal contents), and exercise self-regulations and motivation. We also studied SDT-based interventions aimed at increasing exercise behavior. In all studies, actual or self-reported exercise/physical activity, including attendance, was analyzed as the dependent variable. Findings are summarized based on quantitative analysis of the evidence.

Citation impact

2,800
total citations
FWCI
86.94
Percentile
100%
References
111
Citations per year

Authors

5

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Self-determination theory
  • Psychology
  • Competence (human resources)
  • Attendance
  • Psychological intervention
  • Empirical research
  • Autonomy
  • Intrinsic motivation
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