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      The exercise paradox: An interactional model for a clearer conceptualization of exercise addiction

      review-article
        1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , *
      Journal of Behavioral Addictions
      Akadémiai Kiadó
      dependence, exercise abuse, research, review, theory, transformation

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          Abstract

          Background and aims: Exercise addiction receives substantial attention in the field of behavioral addictions. It is a unique form of addiction because in contrast to other addictive disorders it is carried out with major physical-effort and high energy expenditure. Methods: A critical literature review was performed. Results: The literature evaluation shows that most published accounts report the levels of risk for exercise addiction rather than actual cases or morbidities. The inconsistent prevalence of exercise addiction, ranging from 0.3% to 77.0%, reported in the literature may be ascribed to incomplete conceptual models for the morbidity. Current explanations of exercise addiction may suggest that the disorder is progressive from healthy to unhealthy exercise pattern. This approach drives research into the wrong direction. Discussion: An interactional model is offered accounting for the adoption, maintenance, and transformation of exercise behavior. The here proposed model has an idiosyncratic black-box containing the antecedents and characteristics that are unique to the individual, which cannot be researched via the nomothetic approach. Subjective aspects in the black-box interact with stressful life events that force the person to cope. The range of coping may be wide. Escape into exercise depends on personal (subjective) and situational (objective) factors, but the subjective components are inaccessible for a priori scholastic scrutiny. It is our view that currently only this dual interactional model may account for the fact that exercise addiction emerges suddenly and only in a few individuals from among those at high risk, estimated to be around 3.0% of the exercising population.

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          Most cited references113

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          Addiction motivation reformulated: an affective processing model of negative reinforcement.

          This article offers a reformulation of the negative reinforcement model of drug addiction and proposes that the escape and avoidance of negative affect is the prepotent motive for addictive drug use. The authors posit that negative affect is the motivational core of the withdrawal syndrome and argue that, through repeated cycles of drug use and withdrawal, addicted organisms learn to detect interoceptive cues of negative affect preconsciously. Thus, the motivational basis of much drug use is opaque and tends not to reflect cognitive control. When either stressors or abstinence causes negative affect to grow and enter consciousness, increasing negative affect biases information processing in ways that promote renewed drug administration. After explicating their model, the authors address previous critiques of negative reinforcement models in light of their reformulation and review predictions generated by their model.
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            Prevalence of the addictions: a problem of the majority or the minority?

            An increasing number of research studies over the last three decades suggest that a wide range of substance and process addictions may serve similar functions. The current article considers 11 such potential addictions (tobacco, alcohol, illicit drugs, eating, gambling, Internet, love, sex, exercise, work, and shopping), their prevalence, and co-occurrence, based on a systematic review of the literature. Data from 83 studies (each study n = at least 500 subjects) were presented and supplemented with small-scale data. Depending on which assumptions are made, overall 12-month prevalence of an addiction among U.S. adults varies from 15% to 61%. The authors assert that it is most plausible that 47% of the U.S. adult population suffers from maladaptive signs of an addictive disorder over a 12-month period and that it may be useful to think of addictions as due to problems of lifestyle as well as to person-level factors.
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              'Behavioral' addictions: do they exist?

              C. Holden (2001)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Behav Addict
                J Behav Addict
                jba
                Journal of Behavioral Addictions
                Akadémiai Kiadó
                2062-5871
                2063-5303
                December 2013
                13 December 2013
                : 2
                : 4
                : 199-208 (pp. 199-208)
                Affiliations
                [ 1Department of Psychiatry and Addictions, Faculty of Medicine, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg, Russia ]
                [ 2Department of Psychiatry and Addictions, Mechnikov North-West Medical University, St. Petersburg, Russia ]
                [ 3Laboratory of Behaviour Neurophysiology, and Pathology, Sechenov Institute of Evolutionary Physiology and Biochemistry, St. Petersburg, Russia ]
                [ 4Institute for Health Promotion and Sport Sciences, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary ]
                [ 5Institutional Group on Addiction Research, Institute for Psychology, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary ]
                Author notes
                [* ] Corresponding author. Attila Szabo Institute for Health Promotion and Sports Sciences, Faculty of Education and Psychology, Eötvös Loránd University, Bogdánfy u. 10, H-1117 Budapest, Hungary. E-mail: drattilaszaboyahoo.com or szabo.attila@ 123456ppk.elte.hu

                Conflicts of interest: The authors declare no conflict of interest.

                Authors' contribution: AYE recognized the need for the review and wrote up the draft paper; ASz reviewed the extant models in the literature and devised the newly presented model.

                Article
                10.1556/JBA.2.2013.4.2
                4154576
                25215201
                0a2a49b2-7eb3-40d5-b40b-8a95d48f977a
                Copyright: © 2013 Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 22 May 2013
                : 12 September 2013
                : 13 October 2013
                Funding
                Funding sources: No financial support was received for this study.
                Categories
                Review Article

                dependence,exercise abuse,research,review,theory,transformation
                dependence, exercise abuse, research, review, theory, transformation

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