Abstract

To choose exercise over alternative behaviours, subjective reward evaluation of the potential choices is a principal step in decision making. However, the selection of exercise intensity might integrate acute visceral responses (i.e. pleasant or unpleasant feelings) and motives related to goals (i.e. enjoyment, competition, health). To understand the factors determining the selection of exercise in its intensity and evaluation as a modality, we conducted a study combining exercise training and evaluative conditioning. Evaluative conditioning was performed by using a novel technique using a primary reinforcer (sweetness) as the unconditioned stimulus and physical strain i.e. heart rate elevation as the conditioned stimulus during interval training, using a randomized control design (N = 58). Pre, post-three weeks interval training w/o conditioning, and after 4 weeks follow-up, participants were tested on self-paced speed selection on treadmill measuring heart rate, subjective pleasantness, and effort levels, as well as delay-discounting of exercise and food rewards. Results revealed that the selection of exercise intensity was significantly increased by adaptation to training and evaluative conditioning, revealing the importance of visceral factors as well as learned expected rewards. Delay discounting rates of self-paced exercise were transiently reduced by training but not affected by evaluative conditioning. In conclusion, exercise decisions are suggested to separate the decision-making process into a modality-specific cognitive evaluation of exercise, and an exercise intensity selection based on acute visceral experience integrating effort, pleasantness, and learned rewards.

Highlights

  • The hypotheses were driven by the assumption that self-selected exercise intensity could be perceived as a reward at an individual level of cardiovascular strain influenced by transient training adaption and balanced against the perceived effort at a given intensity

  • Self-selected speed was significantly increased after training (TR), no changes were detected in the control group (NTR) over time, showing that the training effect on self-selected speed was specific to training

  • Multiple regression analysis (Table 4) showed that the speed changes could be foremost attributed to training adaptation i.e. changes in heart rate per speed (HR/Speed) and rate of perceived exertion (RPE) score changes

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Summary

Introduction

Besides many environmental and personal factors determining physical activity [9], motivation with its intrinsic and extrinsic components are known to be critical for exercise participation (i.e. frequency) [10]. Effort commonly carries a negative value or cost, which provides a reference against which rewards are evaluated; a reward is higher in subjective value if it is earned with easier than greater effort [24, 25]. This concept is supported in humans, as well as in animal studies [25,26,27,28,29,30]. This concept can only be applied to exercise as such, if we assume that exercise has an inherent rewarding property related to physical strain

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