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The Exercise Effect on Mental Health: Neurobiological Mechanisms
Budde, H. — Wegner, M.
1ª Edición Abril 2018
Inglés
Tapa blanda
520 pags
1500 gr
16 x 23 x 2 cm
ISBN 9780815348863
Editorial ROUTLEDGE
LIBRO IMPRESO
-5%
90,85 €86,31 €IVA incluido
87,36 €82,99 €IVA no incluido
Recíbelo en un plazo de
2 - 3 semanas
Preface: Editorial: The Exercise Effect on Mental Health Section 1: The benefits of exercise- A theoretical introduction (Mechanisms) 1. Epidemiology of common mental disorders Robert Kohn 2. Neurobiological changes as an explanation of benefits of exercise Terry McMorris & Jo Corbett 3. Causality in the associations between exercise, personality, and mental health Marleen DeMoor & Eco de Geus 4. Treating depression with exercise--an immune perspective Aderbal Silva Aguiar Junior & Alexandra Latini Section 2: Exerciseeffects in cognition and motor learning 7. Physical exercise and cognitive enhancement David Moreau 8. Exercise induced improvement in motor learning Nico Lehmann & Marco Taubert 9. Exercise effects in cognition and motor learning Megan Herting Section 4: Sport vs. exercise and their effects on emotions and psychological diseases 10. Exercise in the prevention, treatment, and management of addictive substance use Adrian Taylor & Tom Thompson 11. Morbid exercise behavior: Addiction or psychological escape? Attila Szabo, Zsolt Demetrovics & Mark D. Griffiths 12. Aerobic exercise in people with schizophrenia: From efficacy to effectiveness Davy Vancampfort, Simon Rosenbaum, Michel Probst & Brendon Stubbs 13. Exercise and anxiety disorders Jennifer Mumm, Sophie Bischoff & Andreas Strohle 14. Exercise and ADHD: Implications for treatment Lorna McWilliams 15. Can physical activity prevent or treat clinical depression? Nanette Mutrie, Katie Richards, Stephen Lawrie & Gillian Mead Section 5: Implications for the health sector and school 16. Prescribing Exercise for Mental Health: Mode and Dose-Response Considerations Brandon L. Alderman & Ryan L. Olson 17. Acute vs. Chronic effects of exercise on mental health Steven J. Petruzzello, Dan Greene, Annmarie Chizewski, Kathryn Rougeau & Tina Greenlee 18. Can physical activity prevent mental illness? Viviane Grassmann, George Mammen & Guy Faulkner
The Exercise Effect on Mental Health contains the most recent and thorough overview of the links between exercise and mental health, and the underlying mechanisms of the brain. The text will enhance interested clinicians’ and researchers’ understanding of the neurobiological effect of exercise on mental health. Editors Budde and Wegner have compiled a comprehensive review of the ways in which physical activity impacts the neurobiological mechanisms of the most common psychological and psychiatric disorders, including depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia. This text presents a rigorously evidence-based case for exercise as an inexpensive, time-saving, and highly effective treatment for those suffering from mental illness and distress.
Features
- Reviews all currently existing meta-analyses
- Includes the perspective of elite/ high-performance sports. Research has illustrated that sports and exercise may also lead to sport addiction and reduced mental health. This aspect has not been covered appropriately
- Presents a strong focus on the effect exercise has on motor learning and motor development, which is not represented in the other books
- Integrates the most important psychological phenomena related to exercise and mental health with strong neuobiological explanations
Editor(s) Bio
Henning Budde, Phd is Professor of Sports Science and Research Methodology at the MSH Medical School in Hamburg and an affiliating professor at the Lithuanian Sport University and Reykjavik University in Iceland. His main research interest is exercise neuroscience and movement neuroscience. As a teacher, he is interested in how these findings can be implemented in school settings.
Mirko Wegner, Phd is a certified sport psychologist and post-doctoral fellow for the Institute of Sport Science at the University of Bern in Switzerland. His research interests focus on physiological and neurobiological responses to physical and psychological stress, and their affective, health-related, and cognitive consequences. He is an expert in motivation and self-regulation research and specialized in implicit motivational processes and their behavioral physiological associations.
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