3 research outputs found
Associations between intrinsic motivation and leisure-time physical activity at baseline and at follow-up (between-group comparisons of estimated marginal means with linearly independent pairwise tests: baseline—mean dif. = -173 min/week, 99% CI = -223, -124; baseline*—mean dif. = -159 min/week, 99% CI = -209, -110; follow-up—mean dif. = -122 min/week, 99% CI = -175, -69; follow-up**—mean dif. = -74 min/week, 99% CI = -131, -18).
<p>Note: Groups represent the lowest and highest tertile-split groups of adjusted intrinsic motivation means at baseline. At baseline, adjustments were made for highest education level, number of dependent children, employment status, personal income, household income and neighborhood “walking environment” (*and weight control intentions); at follow-up, adjustments were made for number of dependent children, employment status and personal income (**and leisure-time physical activity at baseline and weight control intentions). Error bars indicate the standard error of the mean.</p
Associations between intrinsic motivation and leisure-time physical activity at follow-up among women trying vs. not trying to control their weight.
<p>Note: plots show associations when leisure-time physical activity at baseline was fixed at the geometric mean, number of dependent children was fixed to two, employment status was fixed to working full time and personal income was fixed to medium.</p
Clemente-et-al_Data_BEHECO-2017-0362
Excel file with 10 datasets corresponding to the analysis presented and described in the manuscript. A legend is provided