2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2020.113245
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Affective responses to climbing exercises in children and adolescents during in-patient treatment for mental health disorders a pilot study on acute effects of different exercise interventions

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Cited by 13 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…Previous studies in the clinical context have shown that single bouts of moderateintensity exercise can have positive short-term effects on affective responses in patients with depressive disorder [10][11][12]. Similar decreases in negatively valenced responses were reported after a moderate 30-min exercise bout compared to a quiet rest condition in a study using a between-subjects design [12].…”
Section: Affective Responses To Exercise Bouts In In-patient Settingssupporting
confidence: 57%
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“…Previous studies in the clinical context have shown that single bouts of moderateintensity exercise can have positive short-term effects on affective responses in patients with depressive disorder [10][11][12]. Similar decreases in negatively valenced responses were reported after a moderate 30-min exercise bout compared to a quiet rest condition in a study using a between-subjects design [12].…”
Section: Affective Responses To Exercise Bouts In In-patient Settingssupporting
confidence: 57%
“…Another mode of exercise (climbing for 60 min) resulted in higher pre-during changes in affective valence compared to swimming or occupational therapy in an adolescent clinical sample [11]. However, similar pre-post changes were found in the three physically active conditions with light exercise intensity (mean Ratings of Perceived Exertion in occupational therapy: 8.3, swimming: 9.6, climbing: 11.9) [11].…”
Section: Affective Responses To Exercise Bouts In In-patient Settingsmentioning
confidence: 95%
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