Abstract

Yoga is a traditional practice from India with the potential to promote physical activity and health. Participation worldwide remains low, particularly among men. To better understand yoga participation parameters, with a special focus on what influences male participation, this study examined gender differences in participation motives and conformity to masculine norms. It also explored these factors across three participant subgroups who differed in their engagement with the physical and the more psycho-spiritual aspects of yoga. A total of 546 yoga participants (138 males, 399 females, 9 others), 18–73 years old, completed an online survey that included an adapted version of the Exercise Motivation Inventory–2 and three subscales from the Conformity to Masculine Norms Inventory–46. Results showed significant gender differences in participation motives and conformity to masculine norms. Females were more motivated by positive affect, health/fitness, nimbleness, mind–body integration, and coping/stress management, whereas males were more motivated by supplementary activity and competition/social recognition. These differences should be considered in tailoring messages to promote uptake and continued participation. Furthermore, males were more likely than females to conform to emotional control and heterosexual self-presentation masculine norms. Future research may examine how differences in masculine norm adherence influences uptake, particularly among men.

Highlights

  • Yoga is a traditional practice from India acknowledged for its potential contribution to public health [1,2]

  • This paper focuses on the measures of participation motives, conformity to masculine norms, and a participant type factor representing subgroup differences in engagement with yoga’s psycho-spiritual side, based on the perception and immersion questions

  • The present study examined whether participation motives and conformity to certain masculine norms vary across gender and type of yoga participants

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Summary

Introduction

Yoga is a traditional practice from India acknowledged for its potential contribution to public health [1,2]. It involves a holistic approach to health and well-being, promoting physical activity, healthy behaviors, mental health, and psycho-spiritual development [3,4,5,6]. Given yoga’s wide range of potential health benefits [14,15,16,17,18], there is ample space for participation to grow, among non-dominant subpopulations such as men. In the physical activity field, yoga can be considered a holistic movement practice [6,7], indicating it involves and goes beyond physical exercise to include mental as well as spiritual components. Yoga may serve various functions, and research has shown that

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