# Physical activity motivation is inversely associated with anxiety: a cross-sectional serial mediation analysis involving smartphone addiction symptoms and sleep quality in medical undergraduates

**Authors:** Teng Ma, Lili Wang, Bingwei Dou

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2026.1779799 · 2026-03-12

## TL;DR

Higher motivation for physical activity is linked to lower anxiety in medical students, partly due to reduced smartphone addiction and better sleep.

## Contribution

This study identifies smartphone addiction and sleep quality as mediators between physical activity motivation and anxiety in medical undergraduates.

## Key findings

- Physical activity motivation was inversely correlated with anxiety (r = −0.261).
- Smartphone addiction symptoms and sleep quality partially mediated the relationship between physical activity motivation and anxiety.
- A serial pathway (physical activity → smartphone addiction → sleep quality → anxiety) explained 1.80% of the total effect.

## Abstract

Anxiety is common among medical undergraduates, yet modifiable behavioral pathways underlying the association between physical activity motivation and anxiety remain unclear. Guided by self-determination theory, the Interaction of Person–Affect–Cognition–Execution (I-PACE) model, and the two-process/hyperarousal framework of sleep, we tested smartphone addiction symptoms and sleep quality as parallel and serial statistical mediators of this association.

In a cross-sectional survey of 1,276 Chinese medical undergraduates, we assessed physical activity motivation (Motives for Physical Activity Measure–Revised, 15 items), smartphone addiction symptoms (Smartphone Addiction Scale–Short Version), sleep quality (Sleep Quality Questionnaire−9; higher scores indicate poorer sleep), and anxiety (Generalized Anxiety Disorder−7). All instruments were administered using a harmonized 5-point Likert response format. Indirect effects were estimated using Hayes' PROCESS macro (Model 6) with 5,000 bootstrap resamples, controlling for sex and grade (academic year).

In bivariate analyses, physical activity motivation was inversely correlated with anxiety (r = −0.261, p < 0.001). In the covariate-adjusted serial mediation models, the total effect on anxiety was c = −0.311 (95% CI [−0.385, −0.237]) and remained statistically significant after accounting for smartphone addiction symptoms and sleep quality (direct effect: c′ = −0.216, 95% CI [−0.293, −0.139]). The total indirect effect was B = −0.095 (95% CI [−0.126, −0.066]). Specific indirect effects were significant via smartphone addiction symptoms (B = −0.062, 95% CI [−0.086, −0.040]) and via sleep quality (B = −0.028, 95% CI [−0.046, −0.012]), as well as via the serial pathway (physical activity motivation → smartphone addiction symptoms → sleep quality → anxiety; B = −0.006, 95% CI [−0.010, −0.002]; 1.80% of the total effect).

Higher physical activity motivation was associated with lower anxiety, with this association partially statistically accounted for by lower smartphone addiction symptoms and better sleep quality (lower sleep-quality scores), including a modest serial indirect pathway. Given the cross-sectional design, these indirect effects should be interpreted as statistical associations rather than causal mechanisms; longitudinal and experimental studies using objective smartphone-use and sleep metrics are needed to test temporal ordering.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Anxiety (MESH:D001007), Generalized Anxiety Disorder (MESH:C000726808), Quality (MESH:D012893), Smartphone Addiction (MESH:D019966)

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13018123/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13018123