Behavioral and Psychosocial Profiles Associated with Physical Activity Among University Women: A Hierarchical Segmentation Analysis
Luis Moral-MorenoPhysical activity (PA) participation among university women is influenced by behavioural, psychosocial, and contextual factors. This study aimed to identify hierarchical profiles associated with PA participation using exploratory segmentation methods. A multicentre cross-sectional study was conducted with 417 university women from Chile, Spain, Italy, and Mexico (mean age = 22.2 ± 5.1 years). Participants completed validated questionnaires assessing habitual PA (IPAQ-SF), perceived barriers to PA (BBAQ-21), dietary quality (HEI), and health-related characteristics. Classification and Regression Trees (CART) and Exhaustive Chi-square Automatic Interaction Detection (CHAID) analyses were performed. Self-reported PA change since the pandemic emerged as the first-order segmentation variable within both exploratory models. Women reporting reduced PA since the pandemic had lower observed compliance with WHO recommendations (62.7%) than those reporting stable or increased PA (85.8%). Lack of energy (χ2 = 18.61, p < 0.001) and lack of willpower (χ2 = 28.63, p < 0.001) were the barriers most strongly associated with less favourable PA profiles. These findings support the value of segmentation-oriented approaches for understanding behavioural heterogeneity and informing gender-sensitive health-promotion initiatives in higher education settings. Given the cross-sectional and self-reported design, findings should be interpreted as exploratory segmentation patterns rather than predictive or causal evidence.