Researchers from University of Freiburg in Germany found that how a person doing the sport feels about himself or herself played a big role in feeling strained.
Moreover, it can sometimes be smart to enlist help from supposedly useful sports products - if you believe in them, researchers said.
The team invited 78 people, including men and women between the ages 18 and 32. The participants were made to ride a stationary bicycle-ergometre for 30 minutes.
During their exercise, researchers asked the participants every five minutes what level of strenuousness they were experiencing.
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Right before the exercise, the participants were assigned to different groups and shown one of several short films that either stressed the positive health effects of the coming cycling activity, or dampened the expectations.
In some of the films, the compression shirts were praised as an additional help in cycling, while other films indicated that they would make the test persons' sweating comparable.
Researchers found that the training unit was less strenuous for the test persons when they started out with a positive attitude.
The more athletic the participants perceived themselves to be, the stronger this effect was, researchers said.
They also found that believing in the compression shirt helped. To the subjects who considered themselves athletic, it made no difference, however, for those who said they weren't much good at sports, there was quite an effect.
The study was published in the journal PLOS ONE.