Matching your workouts to your personality could make exercise more enjoyable and give better results
But rather than forcing yourself to enjoy running or that gym class you once attended, the solution may lie in something more straightforward — simply matching a workout to your personality type, according to a study published Tuesday in the journal Frontiers in Psychology.
That's because people with different personality traits enjoy different types of exercise, the study found.
More extroverted people, for example, prefer high-intensity training sessions with others, such as team sports, while people who scored highly on 'neuroticism,' a metric that measures someone's emotional instability, preferred private workouts without people watching them and punctuated by short breaks.
As for those who scored highly on conscientiousness, they 'were more likely to have a well-rounded fitness … and we think that's because conscientious individuals are more likely to be driven by the fact that exercise is good for them,' said the study's co-lead author, Flaminia Ronca, an associate professor in exercise science at University College London.
'Personality determines which intensities and forms of exercises we're attracted to. … If we can understand that, then we can make that first step in engagement and exercise in sedentary individuals,' she told CNN.
These findings have important implications for encouraging more people to exercise, especially since just 22.5% of adults and 19% of adolescents worldwide manage the World Health Organization-recommended 150 minutes of physical activity per week, according to the study.
By focusing on personality types, health care providers may be able to offer a 'more personalized approach to exercise,' said Angelina Sutin, a professor at Florida State University who specializes in investigating links between personality and health, and who wasn't involved in the study.
'Typically … we tell people to exercise and just say: 'We know high-intensity interval training is good for you, so you should do it,'' she said.
'But for people high in neuroticism, they're not going to do it, and we also know that low-intensity exercise can be beneficial too. Knowing that somebody is high in neuroticism, recommending that kind of exercise, maybe people will be more likely to engage in it.'
It is also important to note that personality traits interact with each other, Ronca added. Some people score highly on both neuroticism and conscientiousness, meaning that although they may find exercise anxiety-inducing, they are much more likely to do it since they know it is good for them, she said.
To reach their findings, Ronca and her colleagues in London first directed the 132 study participants, aged between 25 and 51 years old, to complete a questionnaire revealing their personality traits.
The study employed a commonly used model that conceptualizes someone's personality through five traits — extroversion, neuroticism, agreeableness, openness and conscientiousness.
'Personality traits … they're just descriptions of the way people behave in certain situations,' Paul Burgess, a professor of neuroscience at UCL who co-led the study, told CNN.
'And the way that people behave in certain situations is determined to a large degree by their brain capabilities, what they notice, what they pay attention to, what they can remember, how fast they can react.'
The researchers then ran fitness tests on the participants and randomly sorted them into two groups. One group was given an eight-week cycling and strength plan, while the control group did 10 minutes a week of stretching exercises. Of the original 132 participants, 86 completed both pre- and post-testing either side of these eight weeks.
The study team found that, although fitness improved across all personality types for those who completed the cycling and strength program, there was a marked difference in enjoyment of the exercises. More extroverted people enjoyed the higher-intensity lab fitness tests, while more 'neurotic' people enjoyed the home-based light-intensity sessions.
Personality traits also informed how exercise influenced someone's stress levels. People who scored highly in neuroticism had a significant reduction in self-reported stress, much more than in any other group, the study found.
'Those who would benefit the most from a stress reduction are the ones who actually showed a decrease in stress following those eight weeks of exercise,' Ronca said. 'And I think that's quite a powerful message to give.'
Given the many benefits of exercise, including stress reduction, both Ronca and Burgess hope their findings encourage people to find alternative ways of exercise outside the more traditional workouts they might dislike.
'There's a danger, perhaps, that the focus becomes … competitive sports and serious engagement at a time when young people are starting to have lots more demands on them,' Burgess said.
'There are a lot of personalities that don't respond well to that kind of situation, that find it quite stressful.'
Sign up for CNN's Fitness, But Better newsletter series. Our seven-part guide will help you ease into a healthy routine, backed by experts.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

an hour ago
Situation in Gaza is 'catastrophic,' Save the Children's humanitarian director says
As the Israel -Hamas war drags on with little progress on ceasefire efforts, more than 100 organizations are warning of 'mass starvation' in Gaza. Save the Children Gaza Humanitarian Director Rachael Cummings said Sunday that 'the situation in Gaza is catastrophic for children and increasingly now for adults.' Cummings, who has been based in Gaza since early 2024, said conditions at Save the Children's clinics in Gaza are reaching new levels of crisis, and she expects the numbers of malnourished to rise. 'In the first two weeks of July, we've seen exactly the same number of children we saw in the whole of June, and we're expecting that trajectory, sadly, to increase," she said. "The number of children who are malnourished -- very concerningly, pregnant women, women who are breastfeeding are also malnourished." "But this morning, I went to our clinic in Deir Al-Balah, about 10 minutes from where I am right now. It was absolutely packed, and it was a scene I had never witnessed before, and I've been working in this sector for over 20 years in the whole of Africa, in various places around the world. And every child in the health center today was malnourished, but also every adult was extremely thin, gaunt-looking, exhausted. The situation is absolutely terrible here,' Cummings said. According to the World Health Organization, nearly 30,000 children under 5 are now malnourished. The crisis, however, isn't just in the streets, where people are trying to collect food and water from distribution vans, but also in Gaza's hospitals and health care centers, Cummings said. Famine has caused many to seek help, given the mounting health complications endured by those in the city. "And for months I've said, how can it get worse for children? It cannot get any worse for children, but apparently, yes, it can get worse for children. And now, we are seeing all of the coping mechanisms that families have deployed within -- with mothers eating less than three meals a day to two meals a day, to one meal a day. Now, they're not having a meal a day. And this is very, very concerning. And this is at scale,' Cummings said. Israel began new airdrops of humanitarian aid this weekend, though Cummings said she had concerns whether that will be effective enough to get people things like food, medicine and hygiene supplies. "We welcome the humanitarian supplies entering Gaza, of course. And we need to do that in a controlled manner. Airdrops are not in a controlled manner, and one airdrop is equal to around one truck,' Cummings said. "So we need to bring in humanitarian supplies, supplies over land through the recognized routes. We need the U.N. system be enabled to manage the distributions." Israel announced on Friday plans to begin new airdrops of humanitarian aid, though Cummings had concerns whether that will be effective enough to get people things like food, medicine and hygiene supplies. 'Airdrops are not in a controlled manner, and one airdrop is equal to around one truck,' Cummings said. On Sunday, Israel announced a "tactical" military pause in three areas in Gaza. Israel said that it would allow the United Nations and other aid organizations into 'secure' regions to deliver food and medicine. 'We know as Save the Children, as humanitarian agencies, how to do safe and dignified distributions. So yes, we welcome the fact that now the U.N. is allowed to bring in humanitarian supplies, including food, including medicines, including nutrition commodities, and including hygiene supplies,' Cummings said.


CNN
2 days ago
- CNN
Dr. Sanjay Gupta details life-threatening hunger in Gaza
According to the UN's World Food programme nearly 100,000 women and children alone are suffering from severe acute malnutrition in Gaza. CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta details the medical reality of these life-threatening conditions.


CNN
2 days ago
- CNN
Dr. Sanjay Gupta details life-threatening hunger in Gaza
According to the UN's World Food programme nearly 100,000 women and children alone are suffering from severe acute malnutrition in Gaza. CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta details the medical reality of these life-threatening conditions.