# Martial arts training as a psychological self-regulation intervention: an experimental study on emotional control, attention, and stress resilience

**Authors:** Cheng Zheng, Jiabing Zhou, Canzhong Ji

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2026.1787259 · Frontiers in Psychology · 2026-03-02

## TL;DR

This study shows that martial arts training improves emotional control, attention, and stress resilience more effectively than regular exercise in young adults.

## Contribution

The study provides empirical evidence that martial arts training outperforms conventional exercise in psychological self-regulation.

## Key findings

- Martial arts training led to significant improvements in emotion regulation, attention, and stress reduction.
- Participants in martial arts training showed greater psychological resilience and reduced sympathetic arousal.
- Martial arts training had larger effect sizes compared to conventional exercise and control groups.

## Abstract

Psychological self-regulation, encompassing emotion regulation, attentional control, and stress resilience, is a critical determinant of mental health and adaptive functioning. While conventional physical exercise has demonstrated psychological benefits, emerging evidence suggests that martial arts training may provide unique advantages due to its integration of physical exertion, cognitive engagement, and emotional regulation. However, randomized controlled trials directly comparing martial arts training with conventional exercise using multimodal outcome measures remain limited.

Sixty-six healthy young adults (18–25 years) were randomly assigned to a martial arts self-regulation training group (MA-SRT), a conventional physical exercise group (CPEG), or a passive control group (n = 22 per group). The intervention lasted 8 weeks, with three 60 min sessions per week. Primary outcomes included emotion regulation (ERQ), attentional control (continuous performance task reaction time), and perceived stress (PSS-10). Secondary outcomes assessed psychological resilience (CD-RISC-25), electro-dermal activity, and executive inhibitory control (Stroop task). Outcomes were measured pre- and post-intervention. Data were analyzed using mixed-model repeated-measures ANOVA with effect sizes reported as partial eta squared and Cohen’s d.

Significant group × time interactions were observed for all primary and secondary outcomes (all p < 0.001). The MA-SRT group demonstrated the largest improvements in emotion regulation, attentional performance, and stress reduction, with large effect sizes (η2
p
 = 0.49–0.75), whereas the CPEG showed moderate improvements and the control group minimal change. Secondary outcomes similarly favored the MA-SRT group, including marked gains in psychological resilience, reductions in sympathetic arousal, and enhanced executive control (η2
p
 = 0.53–0.71).

These findings indicate that martial arts training is a highly effective psychological self-regulation intervention, producing superior emotional, cognitive, and physiological benefits compared to conventional physical exercise. The integrative cognitive-emotional demands inherent in martial arts practice may uniquely enhance self-regulatory capacity in young adults.

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12989581/full.md

## References

57 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12989581/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12989581