Article

Classifying the non-metabolic demands of different physical activity types: The Physical Activity Demand (PAD) typology

Details

Citation

Roberts C, Phillips L, Cooper C, Gray S, Soiza R & Allan J (2023) Classifying the non-metabolic demands of different physical activity types: The Physical Activity Demand (PAD) typology. PLOS ONE, 18 (10), p. e0291782. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0291782

Abstract
Different physical activity types vary in metabolic demand (intensity), but also in non-metabolic physical demand (balance, co-ordination, speed and flexibility), cognitive demand (attention, memory and decision making), and social demand (social interaction). Activity types with different combinations of demands may have different effects on health outcomes but this cannot be formally tested until such demands can be reliably quantified. The present Delphi expert consensus study aimed to objectively quantify the cognitive, physical and social demands of different core physical activity types and use these scores to create a formal Physical Activity Demand (PAD) typology. International experts (n = 40; experts in cognitive science, psychology, sports science and physiology; 7 different nationalities; 18 male/22 female; M = 13.75 years of disciplinary experience) systematically rated the intrinsic cognitive, physical and social demands of 61 common activity types over 2-rounds of a modified Delphi (expert consensus) study. Consensus (>70% agreement) was reached after 2 rounds on the demands of 59/61 activity types. Cognitive, physical and social demand scores were combined to create an overall non-metabolic demand rating for each activity type, and two-step cluster-analysis was used to identify groups of activities with comparable demand profiles. Three distinct clusters of activities were identified representing activity types with low (n = 12 activities; e.g. domestic cleaning), moderate (n = 23 activities; e.g. tai-chi) and high (n = 24 activities; e.g. football) total non-metabolic demands. These activity types were then organised into a formal typology. This typology can now be used to test hypotheses about if and why physical activity types with different combinations of cognitive, physical and social demands affect health outcomes in different ways.

Journal
PLOS ONE: Volume 18, Issue 10

StatusPublished
FundersUniversity of Aberdeen
Publication date19/10/2023
Publication date online19/10/2023
Date accepted by journal19/08/2023
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/36115
PublisherPublic Library of Science (PLoS)
eISSN1932-6203

People (1)

Professor Julia Allan

Professor Julia Allan

Professor in Psychology, Psychology

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