Hartford Courant (Sunday)

You might like high-intensity interval training

Many inactive adults preferred strenuous efforts over gentler workouts, study says

- By Gretchen Reynolds

People who have never tried intense interval training might be surprised to find that the workouts can be more appealing than they anticipate, according to an interestin­g new study of people’s emotional reactions to different types of workouts.

The study, which involved inactive adults sampling intervals and other types of exercise, often for the first time, found that some — although not all — of them preferred the intense efforts to gentler workouts. The findings challenge common assumption­s about the disagreeab­leness of high-intensity exercise and also suggest that the best way to decide which workout might entice you is to play the exercise field.

Almost anyone with a passing interest in fitness is familiar, by now, with the concept of highintens­ity interval training. Consisting of brief, repeated bursts of strenuous exercise interspers­ed with periods of rest, HIIT has become a trendy if controvers­ial way to work out.

Past studies show that even a few minutes of interval training improve fitness and health as much as hours of milder exercise. But in some cautionary psychologi­cal studies, novice exercisers report disliking such intense training, which would seem to limit the workouts’ long-term allure.

Few of these past studies have directly compared people’s feelings about intense and moderate exercise in head-to-head, indepth exercise matchups, however. So, for the new study, which was published in August in Psychology of Sport & Exercise, researcher­s at the University of British Columbia recruited 30 sedentary but otherwise healthy young men and women who said that they had not tried intense interval training before.

The researcher­s invited the men and women to the lab and talked to them there, at some length, about what they had heard about interval training and more traditiona­l exercise, including whether they thought they would be able to complete such workouts and enjoy them, or not.

In general, the volunteers expressed knowledge of but also trepidatio­n about interval training. Most worried that such workouts would be beyond them, physically, and would feel awful.

Then the researcher­s asked the volunteers to exercise. On one visit to the lab, each completed a standard, moderate workout, riding a stationary bicycle for 45 minutes at a sustainabl­e pace. During another visit, they all tried HIIT for the first time, pedaling strenuousl­y for one minute, resting for a minute, and repeating the sequence 10 times. During a third session, they were introduced to super-short intervals, consisting of three repetition­s of 20second, all-out pedaling spurts, with two minutes of rest between each interval.

During and after each workout, the researcher­s asked the volunteers how they felt. In general, most gasped that they were not having fun during the interval sessions. But afterward, reflecting on the experience, many told the researcher­s that maybe those workouts had been tolerable, after all. Surprised and pleased they had gotten through the intervals, a majority of the volunteers reported, in fact, that they now considered the longer HIIT session to have been the most pleasant of all of the workouts.

Supervised lab sessions are not a good reflection of real-life exercise, however. So, as a final step in the study, the researcher­s asked the volunteers to go home and work out on their own for a month, keeping exercise logs, then return to the lab to talk at length with the researcher­s again.

This month of do-ityourself workouts proved to be revealing. Almost everyone remained active, with most completing frequent, moderate exercise sessions, like the 45minute bike rides at the lab. But many also threaded some sort of interval training into their weekly workouts, although few of these sessions replicated the structured intervals from the lab. Instead, people tended to sprint up and down stairs or grunted through some quick burpees and other body weight exercises.

Most interestin­g, during their subsequent interviews with the researcher­s, the volunteers who interval trained on their own said they felt more engaged and motivated during those workouts than in the longer, continuous-intensity sessions, even when the intervals were physically draining.

The upshot of the study data would seem to be that many of us might want to consider HIIT, if we have not already, says Matthew Stork, a postdoctor­al fellow at the University of British Columbia, who led the new study. We might surprise ourselves by liking the workouts.

But, he points out, some volunteers continued to prefer the familiar, less intense exercise, and almost everyone completed more of those sessions than of intervals.

“What the data really show is that there is no one-size-fits-all way to work out,” Stork says. The best exercise will be the one each of us ultimately relishes most, he says. It may require some experiment­ation, though, for us to settle on our particular, preferred workouts.

Of course, this study involved healthy young adults and followed them for a month. Whether people who are older or have health concerns will respond similarly to intervals and whether anyone will stick to their chosen workouts for more than four weeks remain uncertain. Also, people who have not exercised in some time should consult a physician before tackling a new exercise routine.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R SMITH/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A man works out during an interval training class on Aug. 10 in Kansas City, Missouri. Many inactive adults who tried a sampling of exercises preferred intense efforts to gentler workouts, according to a new study.
CHRISTOPHE­R SMITH/THE NEW YORK TIMES A man works out during an interval training class on Aug. 10 in Kansas City, Missouri. Many inactive adults who tried a sampling of exercises preferred intense efforts to gentler workouts, according to a new study.

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