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Brandon C. Irwin, Jennifer Scorniaenchi, Norbert L. Kerr, Joey C. Eisenmann, Deborah L. Feltz, Aerobic Exercise Is Promoted when Individual Performance Affects the Group: A Test of the Kohler Motivation Gain Effect, Annals of Behavioral Medicine, Volume 44, Issue 2, October 2012, Pages 151–159, https://doi.org/10.1007/s12160-012-9367-4
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Abstract
A key barrier to achieving recommended intensity and duration of physical activity is motivation.
We investigated whether a virtually present partner would influence participants’ motivation (duration) during aerobic exercise.
Fifty-eight females (Mage = 20.54 ± 1.86) were randomly assigned to either a coactive condition (exercising alongside another person, independently), a conjunctive condition (performance determined by whichever partner stops exercising first) where they exercised with a superior partner, or to an individual condition. Participants exercised on a stationary bike at 65 % of heart rate reserve on six separate days.
Across sessions, conjunctive condition participants exercised significantly longer (M = 21.89 min, SD = ±10.08 min) than those in coactive (M = 19.77 min, SD = ± 9.00 min) and individual (M = 10.6 min, SD = ±5.84 min) conditions (p < 0.05).
Exercising with a virtually present partner can improve performance on an aerobic exercise task across multiple sessions.