“…To this point, studies have demonstrated that implicit attitudes are directly associated with the amount of physical activity people engage in, both selfreported or measured with accelerometers, even after controlling for the variability explained by explicit processes (see Rebar et al, 2016;Schinkoeth & Antoniewicz, 2017, for reviews). Indeed, several studies found that implicit and explicit attitudes toward physical activity are mostly unrelated (e.g., Brand & Antoniewicz, 2016;Hyde, Doerksen, Ribeiro, & Conroy, 2010) and independently associated with physical activity behavior (e.g., Calitri et al, 2009;Chevance, Caudroit et al, 2017;Padin et al, 2017). However, to the best of our knowledge, there is no evidence yet of indirect associations between implicit attitudes and physical activity through interactions with explicit processes (see for example Muschalik, Elfeddali, Candel, & de Vries, 2018;Chevance, Caudroit et al, 2018), or other implicit processes (e.g., attentional bias, approach-avoidance tendencies, see…”