Muscular strength is associated with self-esteem in college men but not women

JT Ciccolo, NJ SantaBarbara…�- Journal of health�…, 2016 - journals.sagepub.com
Journal of health psychology, 2016journals.sagepub.com
Muscular strength is a well-known predictor of morbidity and mortality. Similarly, self-esteem
is a predictor of health and well-being. The relationship between these two variables,
however, is currently unknown. This study examined the cross-sectional relationship
between maximal muscular strength (ie handgrip and one-repetition-maximum (1-RM)
squat) and global self-esteem in 126 college students. Significant correlations were found
between both measures of muscular strength and self-esteem. Further analyses revealed�…
Muscular strength is a well-known predictor of morbidity and mortality. Similarly, self-esteem is a predictor of health and well-being. The relationship between these two variables, however, is currently unknown. This study examined the cross-sectional relationship between maximal muscular strength (i.e. handgrip and one-repetition-maximum (1-RM) squat) and global self-esteem in 126 college students. Significant correlations were found between both measures of muscular strength and self-esteem. Further analyses revealed that these relationships were only significant for men. Based on these results, additional research is needed to further explore the relationship between muscular strength and self-esteem, especially in other demographic groups and longitudinally.
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