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Kinesiology and Community Health :: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

The Department of Kinesiology and Community Health
College of Applied Health Sciences

Publications

  • Petruzzello, S.J., Landers, D.M., Hatfield, B.D., Kubitz, K.A., & Salazar, W. (1991). A meta-analysis on the anxiety reducing effects of acute and chronic exercise: Outcomes and mechanisms. Sports Medicine, 11, 143-182.
  • Petruzzello, S.J. & Landers, D.M. (1994). State anxiety reduction and exercise: Does hemispheric activation reflect such changes? Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 26, 1028-1035.
  • Petruzzello, S.J. & Tate, A.K. (1997). Brain activation, affect, and aerobic exercise: An examination of both state-independent and state-dependent relationships. Psychophysiology, 34, 527-533.
  • Hall, E.E. & Petruzzello, S.J. (1999). Frontal asymmetry, dispositional affect and physical activity in older adults. Journal of Aging & Physical Activity, 7, 76-90.
  • Ekkekakis, P., & Petruzzello, S.J. (1999). Acute aerobic exercise and affect: Current status, problems, and prospects regarding dose response. Sports Medicine, 28 (5), 337-374.
  • Ekkekakis, P., Hall, E.E., VanLanduyt, L.M., & Petruzzello, S.J. (2000). Walking in (affective) circles: Can short walks enhance affect? Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 23, 245-275.
  • Hall, E.E., Ekkekakis, P., Van Landuyt, L.M., & Petruzzello, S.J. (2000). Resting frontal asymmetry predicts self-selected walking speed but not affective responses to a short walk. Research Quarterly for Exercise & Sport, 71, 74-79.
  • VanLanduyt, L.M., Ekkekakis, P., Hall, E.E., & Petruzzello, S.J. (2000). Throwing the mountains into the lakes: On the perils of nomothetic conceptions of the exercise-affect relationship. Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology, 22, 208-234.
  • Petruzzello, S.J., Hall, E.E., & Ekkekakis, P. (2001). Regional brain activation as a biological marker of affective responsivity to acute exercise: Influence of fitness. Psychophysiology, 38, 99-106.
  • Smith, D.L., Petruzzello, S.J., & Manning, T. (2001). The effect of strenuous live-fire drills on cardiovascular and psychological responses of recruit firefighters. Ergonomics, 44(3), 244-254.
  • Smith, D.L., Petruzzello, S.J., Chludzinski, M.A., Reed, J.J., & Woods, J.A. (2001). Effect of strenuous live-fire fire fighting drills on hematological, blood chemistry and psychological measures. Journal of Thermal Biology, 26, 375-379.>
  • Ekkekakis, P., & Petruzzello, S.J. (2000). Analysis of the affect measurement conundrum in exercise psychology: I. Fundamental issues. Psychology of Sport and Exercise, 1, 71-88.
  • Ekkekakis, P., & Petruzzello, S.J. (2001). Analysis of the affect measurement conundrum in exercise psychology: II. A conceptual and methodological critique of the Exercise-induced Feeling Inventory. Psychology of Sport and Exercise, 2, 1-26.
  • Ekkekakis, P., & Petruzzello, S.J. (2001). Analysis of the affect measurement conundrum in exercise psychology: III. A conceptual and methodological critique of the Subjective Exercise Experiences Scale. Psychology of Sport and Exercise, 2, 205-232.
  • Ekkekakis, P., & Petruzzello, S.J. (2002). Analysis of the affect measurement conundrum in exercise psychology: IV. A conceptual case for the affect circumplex. Psychology of Sport and Exercise, 3, 35-63.
  • Hall, E.E., Ekkekakis, P., & Petruzzello, S.J. (2002). The affective beneficence of vigorous exercise revisited. British Journal of Health Psychology, 7, 47-66.
  • Ekkekakis, P., Hall, E.E., & Petruzzello, S.J. (2004). Practical markers of the transition from aerobic to anaerobic metabolism during exercise: Rationale and a case for affect-based exercise prescription. Preventive Medicine, 38, 149-159.
  • Ekkekakis, P., Hall, E.E., & Petruzzello, S.J. (2005). Evaluation of the circumplex structure of the Activation Deactivation Adjective Check List before and after a short walk. Psychology of Sport & Exercise, 6, 83-101.
  • Ekkekakis, P., Hall, E.E., & Petruzzello, S.J. (In press, 2005). Variation and homogeneity in affective responses to physical activity of varying intensities: An alternative perspective on dose-response based on evolutionary considerations. Journal of Sports Sciences.
  • Smith, D.L., Petruzzello, S.J., Chludzinski, M.A., Reed, J.J., & Woods, J.A. (2005). Selected hormonal and immunological responses to strenuous live-fire firefighting drills. Ergonomics, 48, 55-65.

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