234 Unraveling the Link: How Emotional Self-Regulation and Procrastination Affect Physical Activity
Radoslawa Herzog-Krzywoszanska, Lukasz Krzywoszanski, Wiktor Potoczny

TL;DR
This study explores how emotional self-regulation and procrastination affect physical activity levels in adults.
Contribution
The study identifies a serial mediation pathway linking emotional self-regulation, procrastination, and physical activity.
Findings
Lower emotional self-regulation is significantly associated with lower physical activity levels.
Emotional self-regulation indirectly affects physical activity through general and physical activity procrastination.
Improving emotional self-regulation could reduce procrastination and increase physical activity engagement.
Abstract
Physical activity has been widely recognized as crucial for promoting optimal physical health, mental well-being, and social functioning. Given its significant impact on overall quality of life, it is essential to identify factors that may hinder engagement in regular physical activity. This study aims to explore the relationship between emotional self-regulation, general procrastination, physical activity procrastination, and physical activity levels among adults. Understanding these mechanisms can inform the development of interventions aimed at increasing physical activity engagement and ultimately promoting overall health and well-being. 186 adults from general population participated in an online survey. They completed questionnaires assessing emotional self-regulation, general procrastination, and physical activity procrastination. Physical activity level was measured based on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPerfectionism, Procrastination, Anxiety Studies
