The new framework suggests that physical activity acts as an external tool that helps harmonize the way the brain processes negative experiences and aversive information. This study outlines how both single training and long-term exercise habits can shape specific cognitive pathways that support better emotional regulation. The study was published in the journal Mental Health and Physical Activity.
When a person encounters upsetting information, the brain initiates a series of cognitive processes. This emotion production sequence typically includes four distinct stages: situation, attention, evaluation, and reaction. The initial situation provides the input and the brain’s attention system determines which elements to prioritize.
According to this perception, the scenario is interpreted through goal-oriented evaluation. The body then forms psychological and physiological responses based on that assessment. These reactions feed back into the system, so unchecked negative reactions can create a loop that increases future suffering.
Emotional regulation is the act of managing these reactions to achieve a stable mental balance. This regulation can occur at different points in the emotional flow. It can occur explicitly when a person makes a conscious effort to distract themselves or reframe the situation.
Regulation can also occur implicitly, through deeply ingrained habits and unconscious mental beliefs about how to deal with stress. Finally, regulation can be automatic. A prime example is mindfulness. This involves observing your emotional state with calm awareness, rather than trying to suppress it.
Researchers Haiting Zhu and Yifan Zhang wanted to understand exactly how physical activity affects these different regulatory systems. Although past evidence emphasized that physical movement improves overall mood, the precise psychological mechanisms linking movement to aversive information processing remained scattered across different scientific fields.
Zhu and Zhang reviewed existing behavioral and neurological studies to build a unified theoretical model. They combined findings from cognitive psychology, affective science, and exercise physiology to uncover in detail how the brain manages negative stimuli. Their framework divides the benefits of physical activity into two distinct categories: acute exercise and habitual exercise.
Acute exercise refers to a single structured physical activity session. According to the researchers, this single session acts as an immediate external activator. It changes emotions by engaging four important cognitive pathways simultaneously: attention, executive function, memory, and reward motivation.
The first pathway affected is attention. During moderate-intensity training, the brain distracts from internal worries and physical symptoms of pain. It shifts cognitive resources to external sensory input and motor mechanics.
Studies using visual attention tests have demonstrated that physical movement biases attention toward pleasant stimuli, while shifting focus away from unpleasant images. This instant reorientation prevents the mind from getting stuck in the initial stages of distress.
The second pathway involves executive functions, which include higher mental skills such as flexible thinking and self-control. A single bout of physical activity increases activation in frontal areas of the brain associated with updating information and suppressing impulses.
When these neural resources are activated, a person can significantly improve cognitive reappraisal. This means that you are better able to evaluate stressful events from a new and constructive perspective. Behavioral tests that measure conflict resolution and impulse control show that physical activity improves the ability to quickly resolve emotional conflicts.
The third mechanism is memory modification. Regulating emotions often requires suppressing unwanted memories to prevent repetitive and anxious thoughts. When people are unable to free themselves from bad memories, they ruminate, a state closely related to clinical depression.
This study proposes that physical activity increases a person’s memory control ability. Highly demanding physical activities, especially those that require complex motor skills or visual tracking, compete for the same mental resources that the brain uses to process memories.
When a memory is recalled, it becomes temporarily unstable and must be re-encoded by the brain. Engaging in difficult physical tasks during this period can disrupt this restabilization process. This confusion ultimately reduces how strongly that negative memory will be felt in the future.
The fourth and final acute pathway involves reward-based motivation. Adequate aerobic conditioning triggers the release of certain neurochemicals, such as dopamine, in the brain’s mesolimbic circuits. This area is heavily involved in how humans process pleasure and expectations.
Activating this reward system creates an immediate sense of accomplishment and positive reinforcement. The motivational energy provided by these chemicals sustains the continued effort required to regulate emotions. It shifts the overall state of the brain from defensive avoidance to goal-directed engagement.
Habitual exercise, systematic physical activity maintained over a long period of time, behaves differently. While a single workout provides temporary relief, habitual exercise builds on the psychological rewards accumulated from individual sessions.
Researchers view habitual exercise as an upward cycle. As people repeatedly experience satisfying feedback from training, these adaptive coping mechanisms become hardwired into their brains. This long-term commitment converts short-term chemical boosts into stable personality traits.
In this continuous cycle, improved executive function and memory control become the automatic baseline. People with active habits develop a stronger chronic capacity for cognitive reappraisal. Our automatic responses to stress become less defensive and more flexible over time.
Long-term routines that specifically incorporate mind-body awareness, such as yoga or tai chi, offer unique benefits. These practices develop an internal focus on physical sensations and train the brain to maintain present-focused attention even in emotionally aroused situations.
Habitual engagement is particularly effective in treating emotion dysregulation. By moving your body regularly, you repeatedly disrupt negative thought patterns and reinforce positive behaviors, making you less likely to be plagued by worries on a daily basis. This explains why an active lifestyle acts as a powerful protective buffer against mood disorders.
This proposed model has limitations that need to be considered. Researchers note that the psychological benefits of migration are not completely uniform across all populations.
Variables such as a person’s age, baseline physical fitness, and pre-existing mental health conditions can change how the brain responds. For example, an intense workout that is highly challenging for a trained athlete may cause an entirely different stress response in an untrained individual.
Additionally, some neurological evidence indicates that aerobic exercise increases brain wave responses to positive imagery in healthy adults, but may not produce exactly the same electrical brain activity in depressed patients. These differences highlight the need for tailored interventions.
Much of the current evidence relies on measuring data at a single point in time or focusing only on a single training session. These methodological limitations limit how scientists can track the exact timeline of emotional improvement.
The researchers emphasize the need for further mechanism-based experiments. By tracking cognitive skills and clinical outcomes over time, future studies could uncover exactly how short-term dopamine bursts develop into lifelong emotional stability.
The study, “Brain in Motion: A framework of cross-pathways linking movement and regulation of aversive information processing,” was authored by Haiting Zhu and Yifan Zhang.

