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How to Use the Perceived Exertion Scale
While doing physical activity, we want you to rate your perception of exertion.
This feeling should reflect how heavy and strenuous the exercise feels to you, combining
all sensations and feelings of physical stress, effort, and fatigue. Do not concern
yourself with any one factor such as leg pain or shortness of breath, but try to
focus on your total feeling of exertion.
Look at the rating scale below while you are engaging in an activity; it ranges
from 6 to 20, where 6 means "no exertion at all" and 20 means "maximal exertion."
Choose the number from below that best describes your level of exertion. This will
give you a good idea of the intensity level of your activity, and you can use this
information to speed up or slow down your movements to reach your desired range.
Try to appraise your feeling of exertion as honestly as possible, without thinking
about what the actual physical load is. Your own feeling of effort and exertion
is important, not how it compares to other people's. Look at the scales and the
expressions and then give a number.
6 No exertion at all
7 Extremely light
8
9 Very light - (easy walking slowly at a comfortable pace)
10
11 Light
12
13 Somewhat hard (It is quite an effort; you feel tired but can continue)
14
15 Hard (heavy)
16
17 Very hard (very strenuous, and you are very fatigued)
18
19 Extremely hard (You can not continue for long at this pace)
20 Maximal exertion
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