Building Healthy Academic Communities Journal (Nov 2020)

The Influence of Chronotype and Grit on Lifestyle and Physical Activity

  • Melody F. Allee,
  • Sarah E. Anderson,
  • Myra J. Bloom,
  • Scarlet R. Jost,
  • Donald P. Keating III,
  • Andrew S.I.D. Lang,
  • Nancy V. Mankin,
  • Zachary W. Mast,
  • Philip P. Nelson,
  • Esther M. Spear,
  • Enrique F. Valderrama

DOI
https://doi.org/10.18061/bhac.v4i2.7617
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2
pp. 57 – 70

Abstract

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Background: The chronotype of a person refers to an individual's natural sleep-wake cycle and whether that individual prefers morning or evening activities, and grit is an individual's perseverance and passion for long-term goals. Aim: The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between grit, chronotype, physical activity, and leading a healthy lifestyle in college-age students. Methods: Health and fitness data (i.e., chronotype, grit, lifestyle assessment score, and daily steps) from 431 first-semester university students at a private college were collected and analyzed. Results: This study found that grit and chronotype both have significant correlations with living a healthy lifestyle and with physical activity. Grit more accurately predicts a person's lifestyle (β = -13.712, r = 0.39, p < 0.0001) while chronotype more accurately predicts the physical activity, or steps, of a person (β = 66.48, r = .19, p = .0001). Chronotype can also accurately predict the grit of a person (r = .25, p < .0001), and it was found that morning people tend to have more grit. Conclusions: This study concluded that grit, chronotype, steps, and a healthy lifestyle are all significantly correlated with each other. Knowing the relationship between endogenous chronotype, grit, and living a physically active and healthy lifestyle can help inform policy decisions related to the goal of strengthening an institution's inclusive and healthy academic community.

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