scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P6179 | Dimensions Publication ID | 1026833471 |
P356 | DOI | 10.1186/S13102-015-0023-8 |
P8608 | Fatcat ID | release_cu7kwhox7bbqlalipmhscrgl2e |
P932 | PMC publication ID | 4660653 |
P698 | PubMed publication ID | 26613045 |
P5875 | ResearchGate publication ID | 284721622 |
P50 | author | Gavin Tempest | Q57041479 |
Gaynor Parfitt | Q48383847 | ||
P2093 | author name string | Sarah Coombs | |
Charlotte C Hamlyn-Williams | |||
P2860 | cites work | Affect-regulated exercise intensity: does training at an intensity that feels 'good' improve physical health? | Q50577042 |
Physiological and perceptual responses to affect-regulated exercise in healthy young women. | Q50600805 | ||
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The effect of choice of exercise mode on psychological responses | Q57778583 | ||
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Affective responses of inactive women to a maximal incremental exercise test: A test of the dual-mode model | Q58420106 | ||
The affective beneficence of vigorous exercise revisited | Q58796145 | ||
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The Preference for and Tolerance of the Intensity of Exercise Questionnaire: a psychometric evaluation among college women | Q80701518 | ||
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The slow component of oxygen uptake kinetics in humans. | Q30468816 | ||
Age-predicted maximal heart rate revisited | Q33930965 | ||
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Acute affective responses to prescribed and self-selected exercise sessions in adolescent girls: an observational study | Q34276446 | ||
Acute Affective Response to a Moderate-intensity Exercise Stimulus Predicts Physical Activity Participation 6 and 12 Months Later | Q36666676 | ||
Let them roam free? Physiological and psychological evidence for the potential of self-selected exercise intensity in public health | Q37598243 | ||
Does affective valence during and immediately following a 10-min walk predict concurrent and future physical activity? | Q39625121 | ||
Can the feeling scale be used to regulate exercise intensity? | Q40045822 | ||
What intensity of physical activity do previously sedentary middle-aged women select? Evidence of a coherent pattern from physiological, perceptual, and affective markers. | Q40470092 | ||
Validity and reliability of combining three methods to determine ventilatory threshold | Q43786864 | ||
The perceptually regulated exercise test is sensitive to increases in maximal oxygen uptake | Q45074417 | ||
The psychological and physiological responses of sedentary individuals to prescribed and preferred intensity exercise | Q46946272 | ||
The influence of fitness and body weight on preferred exercise intensity | Q47338955 | ||
Patterning of physiological and affective responses in older active adults during a maximal graded exercise test and self-selected exercise | Q47715944 | ||
A quantitative analysis and qualitative explanation of the individual differences in affective responses to prescribed and self-selected exercise intensities | Q48383790 | ||
P304 | page(s) | 30 | |
P577 | publication date | 2015-11-26 | |
P1433 | published in | BMC sports science, medicine and rehabilitation | Q27724725 |
P1476 | title | Can previously sedentary females use the feeling scale to regulate exercise intensity in a gym environment? an observational study | |
P478 | volume | 7 |
Q59808842 | Development of a Self-Determination Theory-Based Physical Activity Intervention for Aged Care Workers: Protocol for the Activity for Well-being Program | cites work | P2860 |
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