DOI: 10.1002/evan.70038 ISSN: 1060-1538

Why Do Humans Exercise? A Neuro‐Evolutionary Framework for Discretionary Physical Effort

Miguel Ángel Rodríguez, Boris Cheval, Markus Gerber, Irene Crespo, Hugo Olmedillas

ABSTRACT

Hominin evolution made physical activity obligatory for survival. Modern environments decoupled effort from ecological returns, generating an evolutionary mismatch that favors energy conservation over voluntary movement. This review distinguishes between subsistence‐based physical activity, the ancestral condition directly coupled to survival, and discretionary exercise, a voluntary behavior performed in the absence of immediate metabolic necessity. It delineates a neuro‐evolutionary framework characterizing discretionary exercise as the functional repurposing of neural systems originally shaped for subsistence, operating through evolutionarily conserved effort‐reward valuation circuitry that computes context‐dependent cost‐benefit trade‐offs. Three complementary evolutionary pathways mediate this process: homeostatic compensation, where exercise reinstates ancestral physiological maintenance signals; costly signaling, where exercise functions as an honest phenotypic display of quality; and reward recoding, where human mesocorticolimbic circuitry attributes abstract significance and reward to physical exertion. These mechanisms explain how neurobiological exaptation and cultural mediation enable sustained voluntary effort in contemporary populations despite the absence of ecological necessity.

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