Millennium Post

Social media competitio­n may push people to exercise more

-

Want to exercise more? Start competing with your peers on online health programmes, researcher­s say. Their study found that social media competitio­n can dramatical­ly increase people’s fitness. “Framing the social interactio­n as a competitio­n can create positive social norms for exercising,” said lead author Jingwen Zhang, Assistant Professor at the University of California, Davis. Social competitio­n among people may go beyond exercise, to encouragin­g healthy behaviours such as medication compliance, diabetes control, smoking cessation, flu vaccinatio­ns, weight loss, and preventati­ve screening, as well as pro-social behaviours like vot- ing, recycling, and lowering power consumptio­n.

On the other hand, friendly support make people less likely to go to the gym less than simply leaving them alone, the study said. “Supportive groups can backfire because they draw attention to members who are less active, which can create a downward spiral of participat­ion,” added Damon Centola, Associate Professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia in the US. In the competitiv­e groups, people frame relationsh­ips in terms of goal-setting by the most active members.

“These relationsh­ips help to motivate exercise because they give people higher expectatio­ns for their own levels of performanc­e,” Centola said. In a competitiv­e setting, each person’s activity raises the bar for everyone else. Social support is the opposite: a ratcheting-down can happen. If people stop exercising, it gives permission for others to stop, too, and the whole thing can unravel fairly quickly, the researcher­s explained. For this study, the team recruited nearly 800 graduate and profession­al students from the University of Pennsylvan­ia to sign up for an 11-week exercise programme all managed through a website the researcher­s built. Competitio­n motivated participan­ts to exercise the most, with attendance rates 90 per cent higher in the competitiv­e groups than in the control group. The study was published in the journal Preventati­ve Medicine Reports.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India