On the pitfalls of conceptualizing excessive physical exercise as an addictive disorder: Commentary on Dinardi et al. (2021)
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Akadémiai Kiadó
Materia
Physical exercise Self-determination theory Addiction-based approach Process-based approach Debate
Fecha
2022-03-01Referencia bibliográfica
Brevers, D... [et al.] (2022). On the pitfalls of conceptualizing excessive physical exercise as an addictive disorder: Commentary on Dinardi et al. (2021), Journal of Behavioral Addictions, 11(2), 234-239. Retrieved Sep 6, 2022. DOI: [10.1556/2006.2022.00001]
Patrocinador
Luxembourg National Research Fund C18/BM/12552025; Spanish Research Agency (Agencia Espanola de Investigacion); Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion) (MCIN/ AEI) PID2020116535GB-I00; Fonds de la Recherche Scientifique - FNRSResumen
This commentary challenges some of the proposals made in the opinion paper entitled “The expanded
interactional model of exercise addiction” by Dinardi, Egorov, and Szabo (2021). We first question the
usefulness of the (expanded) interactional model of exercise addiction to determine the psychological processes
underlying distress and functional impairment in excessive physical exercise. We then consider the
authors’ use of the Self-Determination Theory to model exercise addiction, which risks the misclassification
of strenuous, but adaptive, patterns of physical exercise as exercise addiction. We finally address broader
concerns regarding the idea that maladaptive exercising could be conceptualized as an addictive disorder.