Hannes Gropper
University of Tübingen
8 Papers
1 Citations
Hannes Gropper is an academic researcher from University of Tübingen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biopsychosocial model & Continuous training. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 8 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
The impact of life events and transitions on physical activity: A scoping review
TL;DR: This study indicates that, despite some emerging trends, similar events do not necessarily have similar impacts on PA across individuals and shows that the research landscape is characterized by a lack of conceptual clarity and by disparate methodologies, making it difficult to synthesize results across studies.
The iReAct study - A biopsychosocial analysis of the individual response to physical activity.
Ansgar Thiel,Gorden Sudeck,Hannes Gropper,Felipe Mattioni Maturana,Tanja Schubert,Duangkamol Srismith,Duangkamol Srismith,Manuel Widmann,Simone Claire Behrens,Peter Martus,Barbara Munz,Katrin Elisabeth Giel,Stephan Zipfel,Andreas M. Nieß +13 more
TL;DR: This mixed-method study analyzes the responsiveness to physical activity in the form of a transdisciplinary approach, considering physiological, epigenetic, motivational, affective, and body image-related aspects and draws an integrated picture of the biopsychosocial efficacy of two distinct physical activity programs.
23
"I Trust in Staff's Creativity"-The Impact of COVID-19 Lockdowns on Physical Activity Promotion in Nursing Homes Through the Lenses of Organizational Sociology
Annika Frahsa,Dorothee Altmeier,Jannika M. John,Hannes Gropper,Hanna Granz,Rebekka Pomiersky,Daniel Haigis,Gerhard W. Eschweiler,Andreas M. Nieß,Gorden Sudeck,Ansgar Thiel +10 more
- 07 Oct 2020
TL;DR: Assessment of the impact of the COVID-19-related restrictions on PA promotion in nursing homes from an organizational-sociological lens found that PA promotion was delegated to external service providers, which makes PA promotion not sustainable, particularly during unforeseen events that limit access to the organization.
Does Becoming Fit Mean Feeling (f)it? A Comparison of Physiological and Experiential Fitness Data From the iReAct Study.
Hannes Gropper,Felipe Mattioni Maturana,Andreas M. Nieß,Ansgar Thiel +3 more
- 01 Sep 2021
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined how young inactive adults physiologically respond to an exercise intervention and how those responses are subjectively experienced, and they aimed to assess whether the sequence of two distinct endurance-based exercise modes has an impact on physiological and subjective experienced physical fitness.