The Role of Physical Ardor in Triggering State Anattā and Psychophysiological Recovery
SPAR
Mechanisms of Exercise-Induced Psychophysiological Reset: The Role of Physical Ardor in Mediating State Anattā and Mental Restoration
1 other identifier
interventional
671
1 country
1
Brief Summary
This study investigates how different types of aerobic exercise-specifically continuous treadmill running versus intermittent ball games-influence mental restoration in university students. The research introduces the concept of "Physical Ardor" (PA), a state of high-intensity physical engagement that may act as a "circuit breaker" for persistent self-narrative and stress. A total of 600 participants were assigned to four experimental groups to compare the effects of exercise intensity (moderate vs. high) and modality (continuous vs. intermittent). The study aims to determine whether high-intensity physical ardor can trigger a "State Anattā Experience" (a psychological state of "no-self" and tranquility) and subsequently enhance psychophysiological release and recovery. Results from this study will provide new insights into how structured exercise can be used as an effective intervention for academic stress and mental fatigue.
Trial Health
Trial Health Score
Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach
participants targeted
Target at P75+ for not_applicable
Started Apr 2025
Shorter than P25 for not_applicable
1 active site
Health score is calculated from publicly available data and should be used for screening purposes only.
Trial Relationships
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Study Timeline
Key milestones and dates
Study Start
First participant enrolled
April 1, 2025
CompletedPrimary Completion
Last participant's last visit for primary outcome
June 1, 2025
CompletedStudy Completion
Last participant's last visit for all outcomes
January 15, 2026
CompletedFirst Submitted
Initial submission to the registry
March 12, 2026
CompletedFirst Posted
Study publicly available on registry
March 23, 2026
CompletedMarch 23, 2026
March 1, 2026
2 months
March 12, 2026
March 17, 2026
Conditions
Keywords
Outcome Measures
Primary Outcomes (12)
Rating of Perceived Exertion
The Borg Rating of Perceived Exertion (RPE) scale is a subjective measure of the intensity of physical effort. Participants rate their perceived exertion during exercise on a numerical scale ranging from 6 to 20. 6 represents "no exertion at all" (resting state). 20 represents "maximal exertion" (absolute limit). This scale provides a subjective counterpart to physiological heart rate. In this study, RPE is used to quantify the "mental volitional engagement" component of the Physical Ardor (PA) construct.
Immediately post-intervention (0-2 minutes after the end of exercise)
%HRmax
%HRmax is an objective physiological metric used to quantify the relative cardiovascular intensity of the exercise intervention. It is calculated by dividing the heart rate measured during exercise by the participant's predicted or measured maximum heart rate (HRmax). Estimated Maximum Heart Rate (HRmax) = 220 - Age (years). %HRmax = \[Average Heart Rate during Exercise / HRmax\] × 100%. Throughout the entire intervention session, participants' heart rate is monitored in real-time using a professional-grade wearable device (e.g., Polar H10 heart rate strap). The final reported value is the average %HRmax recorded across the full duration of the active exercise phase.
Continuously during the active intervention session (average of approximately 15/30 minutes, from start to completion of exercise)
Salivary Alpha-Amylase
Salivary Alpha-Amylase (sAA) is a sensitive biochemical marker used to assess the response of the Sympathetic-Adrenomedullary (SAM) system to acute physical stress. In this study, sAA activity serves as an objective physiological validator of Physical Ardor (PA). The enzyme activity is measured in Units per Milliliter (U/mL). This marker helps validate the physiological stress level of the participant and its relationship with the State Anattā Experience (SAE).
Baseline (collected 8-10 minutes prior to intervention, following an 8-minute quiet rest period) and Post-intervention (collected 5-6 minutes after the end of exercise).
Heart Rate Variability
Heart Rate Variability (HRV) is used to assess the cardiac autonomic regulation and the parasympathetic reactivation following physical exertion. HRV is recorded via a high-resolution wearable heart rate monitor (e.g., Polar H10). The primary metric reported is the Root Mean Square of Successive Differences (RMSSD), which reflects vagal tone. To ensure data quality, measurements are taken in a controlled, seated position. This marker serves to evaluate the physiological recovery component of the Psychophysiological Release and Recovery Index (PRRI).
Baseline (collected 8-10 minutes prior to intervention, following a quiet rest period) and Post-intervention recovery (collected 12-20 minutes after the end of exercise).
De-identification
De-identification measures the cognitive shift where an individual temporarily detaches from their personal identity and social roles during high-intensity physical activity. This scale assesses three key psychological facets: 1.Social Role Suspension: The cessation of awareness regarding specific social labels (e.g., "student," "professional"). 2.Narrative Label Offline: The perceived meaninglessness of personal history, past achievements, or failures in the moment of exertion. 3.Pure Existential Awareness: The transition from a social-defined persona to a state of pure existential being.This process is hypothesized to facilitate psychophysiological recovery by "silencing" self-referential stress and narrative-driven anxiety. Average score on a 5-point Likert scale (1 = Strongly Disagree to 5 = Strongly Agree).
Immediately post-intervention (collected 2-5 minutes after the end of exercise, reflecting on the moment of maximum intensity).
Cessation of Self-Narrative
Cessation of Self-Narrative (Subscale of State Anattā Experience Index). This subscale measures the temporary suspension of internal dialogue and self-evaluative thoughts during peak physical exertion. The scale evaluates the "cognitive silencing" effect across three domains: 1.Silence of Inner Voice: The reduction of internal monologue due to high task demands. 2.Absence of Self-Observation: The cessation of self-judgment and the "observer self." 3.Present-Moment Locking: The narrowing of attentional focus solely to immediate physical movement. The significance of this measure lies in identifying the threshold at which physical intensity overrides the brain's default mode network (DMN), effectively halting the self-referential narratives that often sustain psychological stress. Average score on a 5-point Likert scale (1 = Strongly Disagree to 5 = Strongly Agree).
Immediately post-intervention (collected 2-5 minutes after the end of exercise, reflecting on the moment of maximum intensity).
Loss of Agency
The Loss of Agency subscale of the State Anattā Experience Index (SAEI) operationalizes the phenomenological transition from volitional motor control to perceived automaticity during peak physical exertion. This construct delineates the emergence of "autonomic flow" via three dimensions: Automatic Movement (instinctive response to intensity), Withdrawal of the 'Commander' (cessation of explicit motor commands), and Being an Observer (detached witnessing of action). Centrally, this scale captures the dissolution of the "executive self," a shift that optimizes psychophysiological recovery by attenuating the cognitive load inherent in volitional control, thereby fostering mental release and neural efficiency. Data are quantified via a 5-point Likert scale (1 = Strongly Disagree; 5 = Strongly Agree).
Immediately post-intervention (collected 2-5 minutes after the end of exercise, reflecting on the moment of maximum intensity).
Dissolution of Boundaries
The Dissolution of Boundaries subscale of the State Anattā Experience Index (SAEI) operationalizes the sensory-spatial integration of self, body, and environment during peak exertion. This construct delineates a phenomenological collapse across three strata: Instrumental Integration (erasure of the body-equipment gap), Environmental Permeability (loss of somatic-spatial demarcation), and Subject-Object Synthesis (unification of self and surroundings). Representing the apex of the "Anattā" (Non-Self) state, this dimension replaces ego-centered spatial frames with holistic awareness. By attenuating the cognitive load of spatial monitoring, this shift fosters profound mental release. Data are quantified via a 5-point Likert scale (1 = Strongly Disagree; 5 = Strongly Agree).
Immediately post-intervention (collected 2-5 minutes after the end of exercise, reflecting on the moment of maximum intensity).
Loss of Time Perception
Loss of Time Perception (Subscale of State Anattā Experience Index). This subscale measures the subjective distortion and suspension of temporal awareness during peak physical exertion. The scale assesses the phenomenological shift in time perception through three specific facets: 1.Loss of Temporal Tracking: The complete loss of the ability to monitor the duration of the exercise. 2.Time Compression: The sensation that time is "shrinking" or passing significantly faster compared to normal daily life. 3.Absolute Presence: The dissolution of the distinction between "past" and "future," replaced by a continuous sense of the "now." This dimension is significant because it indicates a deep immersion in the task where the brain's executive monitoring of time is bypassed, facilitating a psychological release from the pressure of duration and contributing to the overall State Anattā Experience. Average score on a 5-point Likert scale (1 = Strongly Disagree to 5 = Strongly Agree).
Immediately post-intervention (collected 2-5 minutes after the end of exercise, reflecting on the moment of maximum intensity).
Sense of Relief
Sense of Relief (Subscale of Psychophysiological Release and Recovery Index, PRRI). This subscale assesses the immediate psychological and physical release experienced during the post-exercise recovery phase. The measure evaluates three facets of post-stress recovery: 1.Mental Space: The perception of a refreshed and clear mind, characterized by the "purging" of mental clutter. 2.Stress Detachment: A subjective sense of detachment from prior stressors, where they are no longer perceived as immediate threats. 3.Physical Release: A profound sensation of tension release throughout the body, described as the lifting of a physical burden. This dimension serves as a primary outcome to quantify the recovery efficacy of the State Anattā Experience (SAE). Average score on a 5-point Likert scale (1 = Strongly Disagree to 5 = Strongly Agree).
Post-rest recovery (collected 10-12 minutes after the end of exercise, following the secondary HRV measurement window).
Equanimity & Pliability
Equanimity and Physical Pliability (Subscale of Psychophysiological Release and Recovery Index, PRRI). This subscale assesses the functional quality of recovery, focusing on emotional resilience and physical suppleness following the intervention. The measure evaluates three key facets of the recovered state: 1.Emotional Stability: The perception of being emotionally resilient and centered, characterized by a "grounded" state of mind resulting from physical exertion. 2.Physical Pliability: The sensation of the body being remarkably supple and fluid, where post-exercise relaxation has successfully replaced previous tension. 3.Inner Stillness: A state of profound inner quietness where thoughts remain undisturbed and still. This dimension quantifies the "rehabilitation" quality of the State Anattā Experience, moving beyond simple relief to a state of enhanced psychophysiological readiness. Average score on a 5-point Likert scale (1 = Strongly Disagree to 5 = Strongly Agree).
Post-rest recovery (collected 10-12 minutes after the end of exercise, following the secondary HRV measurement window).
Cognitive Openness & Flexibility
Cognitive Openness and Flexibility (Subscale of Psychophysiological Release and Recovery Index, PRRI). This subscale measures the cognitive expansion and psychological flexibility attained during the post-intervention recovery phase. The assessment focuses on three cognitive domains: 1.Open Awareness: The feeling of being more mentally receptive and less driven by habitual defensive reactions toward others or the environment. 2.Perspective Shift: The ability to view life or personal problems from a broader perspective, transcending narrow self-concerns. 3.Cognitive Fluidity and Novelty: The reduction of mental rigidity, facilitating the embrace of new solutions or creative ideas. This dimension quantifies the "psychological growth" aspect of the recovery, indicating that the State Anattā Experience (SAE) leads to a more adaptive and less rigid cognitive state. Average score on a 5-point Likert scale (1 = Strongly Disagree to 5 = Strongly Agree).
Post-rest recovery (collected 10-12 minutes after the end of exercise, following the secondary HRV measurement window).
Study Arms (4)
Group A: Low-Duration / Low-Intensity - The Baseline Control
ACTIVE COMPARATORGroup A serves as the negative control, evaluating psychophysiological states where physical intensity and duration are insufficient to disrupt self-narrative circuits. Participants perform a 15-minute steady-state walk on a motorized treadmill at 40%-50% %HRmax. From an ontological perspective, this condition is characterized by high cognitive resource availability. The rhythmic, low-demand movement allows the "Narrative Self" to remain hyper-active, facilitating sustained internal dialogues regarding academic stressors or social identity. Consequently, Group A is expected to yield the lowest scores on the State Anattā Experience Index (SAEI), as participants fail to reach the threshold for "Social Role Suspension" or "Narrative Label Offline". Without a significant "unburdening" of the egoic structure, this group is hypothesized to show minimal subsequent effects in the Psychophysiological Release and Recovery Index (PRRI).
Group B: Low-Duration / High-Intensity - The Acute Congestion Path
EXPERIMENTALGroup B tests the "Acute Congestion" hypothesis: whether high-intensity physical pressure can trigger an instantaneous "circuit-breaking" of the egoic narrative within 15 minutes. To eliminate "social loafing," this protocol employs 3-on-3 Basketball and Volleyball HFMD (12-15 balls/minute), maintaining intensity at \> 70% %HRmax via real-time ECG.Neuro-philosophically, unpredictable, high-velocity movements demand total cognitive recruitment. As resources shift to somatic-motor demands, the "Narrative Self" is forced offline, inducing the Cessation of Self-Narrative. Consequently, Group B is expected to yield a significant spike in the SAEI, marked by Social Role Suspension and Narrative Label Offline. This state is corroborated by sharp increases in sympathetic markers, specifically $\\Delta$sAA and heart rate metrics.
Group C: High-Duration / Low-Intensity - The Rhythmic Wear Path
EXPERIMENTALGroup C investigates "monotony-induced decoupling" of the self-narrative through extended duration rather than acute pressure. Participants perform a 30-minute steady-state treadmill session at low intensity (40%-45% %HRmax). Unlike Group B, this protocol leverages the repetitive, predictable nature of aerobic exercise. Ontologically, this path tests whether persistent rhythmic habituation of sensory input triggers an involuntary fading of ego-boundaries. Over 30 minutes, the "Narrative Self" undergoes gradual exhaustion as the brain habituates to static environmental stimuli. While intensity remains low, Group C is hypothesized to facilitate "Passive Anattā", characterized by a subtle Cessation of Self-Narrative. In this state, "stressed student" identities and narrative labels dissolve into Pure Existential Awareness, providing a baseline for understanding how duration alone contributes to the psychological unburdening and recovery measured by the PRRI.
Group D: High-Duration / High-Intensity - The Sustained Flow Path
EXPERIMENTALGroup D examines the synergistic effects of temporal depth and physiological ardor. Due to musculoskeletal injury risks identified in preliminary trials, the high-frequency drills of Group B were deemed unsustainable for 30 minutes. Conversely, standard competitive formats required more than 15 minutes to reliably reach the $\> 70\\%$ %HR$\_{max}$ threshold.Consequently, Group D utilizes 5-on-5 basketball and 6-on-6 volleyball, allowing for a distributed physical load and tactical pauses suitable for an extended session. While this introduction of modality heterogeneity is acknowledged as a limitation, Group D is hypothesized to trigger the most profound State Anattā Experience (SAEI). The combination of high intensity and sustained duration is expected to induce a comprehensive Cessation of Self-Narrative, facilitating a deep transition into Pure Existential Awareness and maximizing the subsequent PRRI recovery effect.
Interventions
Participants engage in continuous running on a motorized treadmill. The protocol is designed to evaluate the psychological and physiological effects of steady-state exercise. Group A: 15 minutes of continuous running at a moderate intensity of 40-50% HRmax. Group C: 30 minutes of continuous running at a moderate intensity of 40-50% HRmax. Heart rate is monitored throughout to ensure compliance with the prescribed intensity zone.
Participants participate in high-intensity intermittent ball games (such as basketball or volleyball). This intervention focuses on the impact of "Physical Ardor" (PA) generated through high-intensity, fluctuating physical engagement. Group B: 30 minutes of intermittent activity at a high intensity exceeding 70% HRmax. Group C: 15 minutes of intermittent activity at a high intensity exceeding 70% HRmax. Exercise intensity is verified through both %HRmax data and the Borg Rating of Perceived Exertion (RPE).
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if:
- Healthy adults aged 18 to 30 years. University students or individuals with equivalent educational background.
- Normal or corrected-to-normal vision and hearing.
- Willingness to comply with all study procedures and sign the informed consent form.
You may not qualify if:
- History of cardiovascular disease, respiratory illness, or chronic pain that may affect Heart Rate Variability (HRV).
- Diagnosis of clinical depression, anxiety disorders, or other psychiatric conditions.
- Current smokers or individuals with a history of alcohol or drug abuse. Recent use of medications affecting the autonomic nervous system or endocrine function (e.g., steroids, beta-blockers, or hormonal medications) within the past month.
- Any disability preventing walking for 30 minutes or completing the Digit Span cognitive task.
Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.
Sponsors & Collaborators
- Lincoln University Collegelead
- Wuhan Technical Universitycollaborator
Study Sites (1)
Wuhan Technical University
Wuhan, Hubei, 430074, China
MeSH Terms
Conditions
Condition Hierarchy (Ancestors)
Study Officials
- STUDY DIRECTOR
Sheng Yan
Wuhan Technical University
Study Design
- Study Type
- interventional
- Phase
- not applicable
- Allocation
- RANDOMIZED
- Masking
- NONE
- Purpose
- BASIC SCIENCE
- Intervention Model
- PARALLEL
- Sponsor Type
- OTHER
- Responsible Party
- PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
- PI Title
- Director
Study Record Dates
First Submitted
March 12, 2026
First Posted
March 23, 2026
Study Start
April 1, 2025
Primary Completion
June 1, 2025
Study Completion
January 15, 2026
Last Updated
March 23, 2026
Record last verified: 2026-03
Data Sharing
- IPD Sharing
- Will not share
There is no plan to share individual participant data to protect the privacy of the participants and ensure data security.