All Stories

  1. ChatGPT makes mistakes
  2. The power of the mind in sports
  3. Passion and risk of addiction in experienced female yoga practitioners
  4. Placebo and nocebo effect in balancing ability
  5. Online Behaviours during the COVID-19 Pandemic and Their Associations with Psychological Factors: An International Exploratory Study
  6. Apples and oranges in the basket of a clinical model for exercise addiction: Rebuttal to Brevers et al. (2022)
  7. Altered States of Consciousness during Exercise, Active-Alert Hypnosis, and Everyday Waking State
  8. Hedonic use, stress, and life satisfaction as predictors of smartphone addiction
  9. Psychological effects of 50-meter swimming: does tempo manipulation matter?
  10. Emotion dysregulation mediates the relationship between psychological distress, symptoms of exercise addiction and eating disorders: A large-scale survey among fitness center users.
  11. Psychological Responses to Progressive Exercise Until Voluntary Exhaustion: A Study of Adolescent Male Basketball Players
  12. An international cross-sectional investigation on social media, fitspiration content exposure, and related risks during the COVID-19 self-isolation period
  13. Behavioral addictions
  14. Commitment versus addiction in sports and exercise
  15. Exercise addiction
  16. Is exercise addiction a symptom or a disorder?
  17. Novel conceptualization of passion and addiction is sport and exercise
  18. Passion
  19. Passion and Addiction in Sports and Exercise
  20. Passion in athletes and leisure exercisers
  21. Primary and secondary forms of exercise dependence
  22. Psychological manifestations of exercise deprivation
  23. Psychometric assessment of exercise addiction
  24. Psychophysiological models for exercise addiction
  25. Runner's high
  26. Sports and exercise for healthy living
  27. Treatment of exercise addiction
  28. Uncovering exercise addiction
  29. Undiagnosed but real cases of exercise addiction
  30. Untangling passion from exercise addiction
  31. Psychophysiological Responses to Laughter Yoga in Women: Two Studies on the Visual and Practice Effects of this New Physical Activity
  32. Model fit and reliability of the Hungarian version of the Revised Exercise Addiction Inventory (EAI-R-HU)
  33. Symptoms of exercise addiction in aerobic and anaerobic exercises: Beyond the components model of addiction
  34. The connection between risk of smartphone addiction, type of smartphone use, life satisfaction, and perceived stress dataset
  35. Validation of the Chinese Version of the Exercise Dependence Scale-Revised (EDS-R)
  36. Information Certainty Influences the Attitudes of Students and Teachers Towards COVID-19
  37. Body-Related Factors and Anxiety Predict Exercise Dependence and Eating Disorders in University Students: A Path Analysis
  38. The expanded interactional model of exercise addiction
  39. Impact of 'last experience' on affect after exercise reaching the anaerobic threshold: A laboratory investigation
  40. Exploring the Relationship Between Mental Well-Being, Exercise Routines, and the Intake of Image and Performance Enhancing Drugs During the Coronavirus Disease 2019 Pandemic: A Comparison Across Sport Disciplines
  41. Nocebo effects on motor performance: A systematic literature review
  42. Exercise Addiction in Athletes: a Systematic Review of the Literature
  43. The Prevalence of Exercise Addiction Symptoms in a Sample of National Level Elite Athletes
  44. General Psychosocial Measures are Affected by the Situation Preceding Assessment: The ‘Arbitrary Distinction’ Between State and Trait Measures is Still Unresolved
  45. Validation of Chinese version of Exercise Dependence Scale-Revised (EDS-R)
  46. Exercise and Use of Enhancement Drugs at the Time of the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Multicultural Study on Coping Strategies During Self-Isolation and Related Risks
  47. Increased Exercise Effort after Artificially-Induced Stress: Laboratory-Based Evidence for the Catharsis Theory of Stress
  48. Mothers’ Physical Activity in the New Millennium: A Systematic Review of the Literature
  49. Exercise Addiction and Perfectionism: A Systematic Review of the Literature
  50. Psychological aspects of three movement forms of Eastern origin: a comparative study of aikido, judo and yoga
  51. Schooling as a Possible Success Factor? A Novel Investigation of Determining Factors of Success in Four Summer Olympic Games
  52. Exercise Addiction During the COVID-19 Pandemic: an International Study Confirming the Need for Considering Passion and Perfectionism
  53. Heart Rate Reactivity to Mental Stress in Athlete and Non-Athlete Children
  54. Attitudes toward COVID-19 and stress levels in Hungary: Effects of age, perceived health status, and gender.
  55. The Impact of the Certainty of Information on COVID-19 Attitudes in Spanish University Teachers and Students
  56. Passion for exercise has three dimensions: Psychometric evaluation of The Passion Scale in a Danish fitness sample
  57. Could attitudes toward COVID-19 in Spain render men more vulnerable than women?
  58. Relationship between aerobic fitness, blood pressure and life satisfaction
  59. Positive life-event expectancies are associated with greater optimism, well-being and emotional intelligence
  60. Immediate and persisting effects of controversial media information on young people’s judgement of health issues
  61. Exercise addiction, obsessive passion, and the use of nutritional supplements in fitness center attendees
  62. Could Attitudes Toward COVID-19 in Spain Render Men More Vulnerable Than Women?
  63. A Longitudinal Study of Exercise Addiction and Passion in New Sport Activities: the Impact of Motivational Factors
  64. Understanding placebo and nocebo effects in the context of sport: A psychological perspective
  65. The efficacy of Self Determination Theory-based interventions in increasing students’ physical activity: A systematic review
  66. A comparative analysis of national Olympic swimming team members’ and para-swimming team members’ psychological profiles
  67. Are There Differences in Life-Satisfaction, Optimism, Pessimism and Perceived Stress between Therapeutic and Mastery Exercisers? A Preliminary Investigation
  68. Reconceptualizing the measurement of expectations to better understand placebo and nocebo effects in psychological responses to exercise
  69. Perceived autonomy support and motivation in young people: A comparative investigation of physical education and leisure-time in four countries
  70. The Placebo and Nocebo effect on sports performance: A systematic review
  71. When Passion Appears, Exercise Addiction Disappears
  72. Role of Personality Characteristics and Sexual Orientation in the Risk for Sexual Addiction Among Israeli Men: Validation of a Hebrew Sex Addiction Scale
  73. Perceived stress, exercise habits, and exercise addiction in Israeli army reserves: A pilot study
  74. Advancing the understanding of placebo effects in psychological outcomes of exercise: Lessons learned and future directions
  75. Validity of the Hungarian version of the Subjective Happiness Scale (SHS-HU)
  76. Analysis of Problematic Smartphone Use Across Different Age Groups within the ‘Components Model of Addiction’
  77. Sport-selfies: Characteristics and differences in gender, ethnic and national origin, type, form, and milieu of sports
  78. Burnout in football coaching
  79. The psychometric evaluation of the Revised Exercise Addiction Inventory: Improved psychometric properties by changing item response rating
  80. ACUTE PSYCHOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF AIKIDO TRAINING
  81. Psychology and Exercise
  82. Subjective psychological experiences in leisure and competitive swimming
  83. Erratum
  84. Consensus statement on placebo effects in sports and exercise: The need for conceptual clarity, methodological rigour, and the elucidation of neurobiological mechanisms
  85. Obsessive and harmonious passion in physically active Spanish and Hungarian men and women: A brief report on cultural and gender differences
  86. Passion and exercise addiction: Healthier profiles in team than in individual sports
  87. Addiction, passion, or confusion? New theoretical insights on exercise addiction research from the case study of a female body builder
  88. Drug, nicotine, and alcohol use among exercisers: Does substance addiction co-occur with exercise addiction?
  89. Sexual Violence Against Children in Sports and Exercise: A Systematic Literature Review
  90. Morbid Exercise Behavior
  91. The Exercise Effect on Mental Health
  92. Super Pill is Less Effective than an Ordinary Mint in Altering Subjective Psychological Feeling States within a Few Minutes
  93. Adolescents’ dual affective response to dance in training, grading, and competition
  94. The Role of Passion in Exercise Addiction, Exercise Volume, and Exercise Intensity in Long-term Exercisers
  95. PROBLEMATIC ALCOHOL USE IN TEAM AND INDIVIDUAL EXERCISE SETTINGS
  96. Perceived usefulness of mirrored video self-modeling in the development of bilateral competence in elite team-sports
  97. Validation of the Hungarian version of the Humor Styles Questionnaire (HSQ-H)
  98. The Psychometric Properties of the Smartphone Application-Based Addiction Scale (SABAS)
  99. Induced beliefs about a fictive energy drink influences 200-m sprint performance
  100. Is there a link between the volume of physical exercise and emotional intelligence (EQ)?
  101. A 90 DAY SUPPLEMENTATION OF POLYUNSATURATED FATTY ACIDS (PUFA) HAS BENEFITS ON HEALTH MEASURES AND EXERCISE PERFORMANCE
  102. Before the Rio Games: A retrospective evaluation of the effects of the population size, GDP and national temperature on winning medals at the 2012 London Olympic Games
  103. EXERCISE ADDICTION AND PERSONALITY: A TWO-DECADE SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF THE EMPIRICAL LITERATURE (1995–2016)
  104. Humor Styles Questionnaire--Hungarian Version
  105. An in-situ investigation of the acute effects of Bikram yoga on positive- and negative affect, and state-anxiety in context of perceived stress
  106. The Impact of Laterality on Soccer Performance
  107. Pilates is a great exercise
  108. This is the first review on superstitious behavior in sport.
  109. Exercise Addiction in Athletes and Leisure Exercisers: The Moderating Role of Passion
  110. Psychological effects of deep-breathing: the impact of expectancy-priming
  111. Exercise Addiction
  112. Book Review
  113. Sport and Exercise Psychology
  114. The impact of Internet-based specific activities on the perceptions of Internet addiction, quality of life, and excessive usage: A cross-sectional study
  115. Effect of spinning workouts on affect
  116. Coaches' attitudes towards placebo interventions in sport
  117. A cross-cultural re-evaluation of the Exercise Addiction Inventory (EAI) in five countries
  118. Anxiety and Affect in Successful and Less Successful Elite Female Basketball Players: in-Situ Sampling Before Six Consecutive Games
  119. Elite athletes' attitudes towards the use of placebo‐induced performance enhancement in sports
  120. Is excessive online usage a function of medium or activity?
  121. Exercise Addiction
  122. Perceptual Characteristics of Nutritional Supplements Determine the Expected Effectiveness in Boosting Strength, Endurance, and Concentration Performances
  123. Exercise addiction in Spanish athletes: Investigation of the roles of gender, social context and level of involvement
  124. The exercise paradox: An interactional model for a clearer conceptualization of exercise addiction
  125. Sport and exercise psychology research and Olympic success: An analytical and correlational investigation
  126. The psychological benefits of recreational running: A field study
  127. Acute psychological benefits of exercise: Reconsideration of the placebo effect
  128. Psychology and Exercise
  129. Acute effects of light exercise on subjectively experienced well-being: Benefits in only three minutes
  130. Psychometric properties and concurrent validity of two exercise addiction measures: A population wide study
  131. Perceived Determinants of Well-Being and Enjoyment Level of Leisure Activities
  132. Susceptibility to addictive behaviour in online and traditional poker playing environments
  133. Exercise Addiction: Symptoms, Diagnosis, Epidemiology, and Etiology
  134. Fat pattern of athlete and non-athlete girls during puberty
  135. Placebo Effects in Sport and Exercise: A Meta-Analysis
  136. Preliminary results on the adaptation of the Hungarian version of the Wong and Law Emotional Intelligence Scale (WLEIS-HU)
  137. Exercise addiction: A rare but severe psychological dysfunction
  138. The effect of different stressors on the QT interval and the T wave
  139. Prolonged QT Interval Corrected for Heart Rate During Diabetic Ketoacidosis in Children: Psychological Stress Could Be Another Explanation
  140. Hyperglycaemia induced QT interval duration: a key to the increased risk of sudden death in diabetic patients?
  141. Performance Enhancement with Music in Rowing Sprint
  142. Methadone-Induced QTc Prolongation: Is It Due to Stereoselective Block of hERG or to Inappropriate QT Interval Correction?
  143. Acute psychological benefits of aerobic exercise: A field study into the effects of exercise characteristics
  144. Mental Stress May Induce QT-Interval Prolongation and T-Wave Notching
  145. Exercise and Internet Addiction: Communalities and Differences Between Two Problematic Behaviours
  146. Exercise Addiction in British Sport Science Students
  147. Is neuroticism really associated with increased arrhythmia risk?
  148. The exercise addiction inventory: a quick and easy screening tool for health practitioners
  149. Experimental comparison of the psychological benefits of aerobic exercise, humor, and music
  150. The exercise addiction inventory: a new brief screening tool
  151. Cybercheats
  152. A brief and easy tool to scan for exercise addiction
  153. Academic offences and e-learning: individual propensities in cheating
  154. Acute effects of cigarette smoking on the QT interval in healthy smokers
  155. Motivation for increased self-selected exercise intensity following psychological distress: laboratory-based evidence for catharsis?
  156. Duration and dispersion of QT interval in smokers
  157. Phenylethylamine, a possible link to the antidepressant effects of exercise?
  158. The psychological impact of training deprivation in martial artists
  159. Is the Experience Sampling Method (ESM) appropriate for studying pre-competitive emotions?
  160. Using IT in the undergraduate classroom: should we replace the blackboard with PowerPoint?
  161. Temporal patterning of competitive emotions: A critical review
  162. Guidelines for Internet Research
  163. The Effect of Vocalization on the Heart Rate Response to Mental Arithmetic
  164. Effects of psychological and physiological challenges on heart rate, T-wave amplitude, and pulse-transit time
  165. Anxiety and heart rate under psychological stress: The effects of exercise-training
  166. Blood pressure and heart rate reactivity to mental strain in adolescent judo athletes
  167. Mental challenge elicits “additional” increases in heart rate during low and moderate intensity cycling
  168. The combined effects of orthostatic and mental stress on heart rate, T-wave amplitude, and pulse transit time
  169. Psychophysiological profiles in response to various challenges during recovery from acute aerobic exercise
  170. Mathematical Performance Before, During, and following Cycling at Workloads of Low and Moderate Intensity
  171. Application of the Experience Sampling Method to the Study of the Effects of Exercise Withdrawal on Well-Being
  172. Habitual Participation in Exercise and Personality
  173. Reactivity to written mental arithmetic: Effects of exercise lay-off and habituation
  174. MATHEMATICAL PERFORMANCE BEFORE DURING AND FOLLOWING CYCLING AT WORKLOADS OF LOW AND MODERATE INTENSITY
  175. Changes in brain dopamine levels, oocyte growth and spermatogenesis in rainbow trout,Oncorhynchus mykiss, following sublethal cyanide exposure
  176. Physical Versus Psychological Determinants of Heart Rate Reactivity to Mental Arithmetic
  177. What is typical about young athletes
  178. Relationship between parents' education level and athletes' gender on sporting achievements of pupils in the Central School of Sports in Budapest
  179. A cross-cultural examination of motivational components of exercise adherence in sports and exercise
  180. Acute psychological effects of aerobic exercise performed at self-selected workloads in a field and a laboratory experiment
  181. Information processing time decreases as exercise intensity increases but the (expected) affective benefits are absent
  182. Symposium 4: Exercise, mood and affect: Exploring mechanisms for change: Comparison of the duration of the mood benefits of acute exercise and humour: Stepping out from the lab
  183. The "Iceberg-Profile" in exercising versus non-exercising university staff: A cross-cultural phenomenon?