The relationship between commitment and exercise behavior
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Date
2004Author
Wilson, Philip M.
Rodgers, Wendy M.
Carpenter, Paul J.
Hall, Craig
Hardy, James
Fraser, Shawn N.
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Show full item recordAbstract
Objectives: The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between commitment and exercise
behavior using the Sport Commitment Model (SCM; J Sport & Exercise Psychology, 15, 1) as a guiding
conceptual framework.
Design: Cross-sectional survey.
Methods: Participants at two universities (N1 = 205; 83.4% female; N2 = 223; 73.1% female) provided
demographic information and completed measures of exercise commitment and frequency of exercise
behavior.
Results: Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses supported the presence of 5 determinants (personal
investments, social support, satisfaction, social constraints, and invovlement alternatives) and 2 dimensions
(‘want’ and ‘have’) of commitment. Structural equation modeling analyses supported the predictive utility
of the SCM accounting for 31% and 51% of the commitment dimension variance and 12% of the exercise
behavior variance respectively. Satisfaction and personal investment predicted both commitment dimensions,
whereas alternatives and social constraints predicted ‘have to’ commitment only, and the ‘want to’
commitment dimension was the only significant predictor of exercise behavior.
Conclusion: These results render some support for the psychometric properties of the measures used to
assess commitment constructs in the exercise domain and provide partial support for the application of the
SCM to the study of exercise motivation issues.