ABSTRACT

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.

part 1|110 pages

The Benefits of Exercise – a Theoretical Introduction (Mechanisms)

part 2|58 pages

Age-Related Effects of Exercise on Mental Health

part 3|78 pages

Exercise Effects in Cognition and Motor Learning

part 4|162 pages

Sport vs. Exercise and Their Effects on Emotions and Psychological Diseases

chapter 11|35 pages

Morbid Exercise Behavior

Addiction or Psychological Escape? *

chapter 12|22 pages

Aerobic Exercise in People with Schizophrenia

From Efficacy to Effectiveness

chapter 14|22 pages

Exercise and ADHD

Implications for Treatment

part 5|94 pages

Implications for the Health Sector and School