3,798 research outputs found
Goal confidence and difficulty as predictors of goal attainment in junior high school cross-country runners
This study examined the influence of confidence in a goal and difficulty of the goal on the attainment of self-set goals regarding time and position. 63 Junior high school cross-country runners (M Age=13.5 yr., SD=.5 yr.) completed a 6-item Race Goals Questionnaire approximately 24 hr. prior to a 2km race. Attainability of a goal was assessed by categorizing runners into either a Performed to Expectation (Time, Position) or an Underperformed group (Time, Position). A 2 x 2 multivariate analysis of variance indicated significant differences between the two groups on Time for Confidence in and Difficulty of goals. There were no differences between the two groups on Position. Discriminant function analyses to predict time goal performance indicated that 47 (74.6%, participants could be correctly classified into the groups by Time on the basis of Confidence in, and Difficulty of goals. Discriminant function analyses to predict performance in terms of Position indicated 38 participants (60.3%) could be correctly classified on the basis of Confidence in, and Goal Difficulty of goals. The results concur with previous proposals that goals regarding time and position have a differential influence on performance.The official published version of this article can be found at the Publisher link belo
Emotional and cognitive changes during and post a near fatal heart attack and one-year after: A case study
This case study reports on changes in emotions before and during an unexpected heart rate in a young, apparently healthy male with a life-long history of exercise in the absence of family history of heart problems. He completed the Brunel Mood Scale (Terry et al., 2003) to assess emotions before, during, and after the heart attack, and also describing his thoughts during these periods. Results indicate he experienced unpleasant emotions in the build up to the heart attack, feelings he attributed at the time to frustration to achieve fitness goals. He maintained an exercise regime prior to having a heart attack, a finding consistent with previous research suggesting that early diagnosis, although vital for survival, is not likely to be identified among seemingly healthy individuals. During the heart attack, he experienced a rapid emotional change characterised by a rapid increase in anger coupled with thoughts of needing to survive. The intensity of emotions and regulation strategies employed before and during the heart attack provide insight this experience, and we suggest future research should investigate emotional change during adverse conditions
Recommended from our members
Antecedents of state anxiety in rugby
The official published version of this article can be found at the link below.The purpose of this study was to extend research investigating the antecedents of multidimensional state anxiety into the sport of rugby. Participants (N=86; Age: M=23.7 yr., SD=4.8 yr.) completed a 10-item Prematch Questionnaire developed to assess the antecedents of anxiety and the Competitive State Anxiety Inventory-2 1 hr. prior to competition. Factor analysis of intercorrelations of scores on the Prematch Questionnaire indicated that three factors accounted for 63.3% of the variance. These were labelled Perceived Readiness, Match Conditions, and Coach Influence. Stepwise multiple regression indicated that Perceived Readiness predicted rated Self-confidence and Somatic Anxiety. Game conditions also predicted Self-confidence. Collectively, these factors accounted for 30% of Self-confidence and 11% of Somatic Anxiety. No factor predicted Cognitive Anxiety. Findings support the notion that each sport has unique stressors and that researchers should seek sport-specific measures of the antecedents of anxiety (Lane, Terry, & Karageorghis, 1995a, 1995b)
Path analysis examining relationships among antecedents of anxiety, multidimensional state anxiety, and triathlon performance
The official published version of this article can be found at the link below. This is a authors’ draft of the paper:
Copyright @ Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1995The study explored predictive paths for antecedents of anxiety, state anxiety responses, and performance. Male triathletes (N = 175) completed a modified Competitive State Anxiety Inventory-2 which included the original intensity scale and a direction scale of Jones and Swain. They also completed a 23-item Prerace Questionnaire which measured antecedents of anxiety among triathletes. Factor analysis of intercorrelations for the Prerace Questionnaire identified six factors similar to those found in 1995 by the present authors. Path analysis to predict state anxiety from antecedents of anxiety indicated that rated intensity of anxiety was predicted by the perceived difficulty of race goals and by perceived readiness. Direction of anxiety was predicted by coach's influence, recent form, and perceived readiness. Path analysis to predict performance from state-anxiety scores and antecedents of anxiety indicated that recent form predicted performance directly without mediation of anxiety responses. Anxiety scores did not predict performance. The findings support the notion that intensity and direction of anxiety responses have different antecedents
Development and initial validation of the Music Mood-Regulation Scale (MMRS)
This study designed a measure to assess the perceived effectiveness of music as a strategy to regulate mood among a sport and exercise population. A strategy of assessing and comparing the integrity of competing hypotheses to explain the underlying factor structure of the scale was used. A 21-item Music Mood-Regulation Scale (MMRS) was developed to assess the extent to which participants used music to alter the mood states of anger, calmness, depression, fatigue, happiness, tension, and vigor. Volunteer sport and exercise participants (N = 1,279) rated the perceived effectiveness of music to regulate each MMRS item on a 5-point Likert-type scale. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was used to test the integrity of four competing models, and results lend support to a correlated 7-factor structure for the MMRS (RCFI = .94; RMSEA = .06). Cronbach alpha coefficients were in the range of 0.74 – 0.88 thus demonstrating the internal reliability of scales. It is suggested that the MMRS shows promising degrees of validity. Future research should assess the extent to which individuals can develop the ability to use music as a strategy to regulate mood in situations in which disturbed mood might be detrimental to performance
Use and perceived effectiveness of pre-competition mood regulation strategies among athletes
The well-established link between mood and sport performance highlights a need for athletes to develop mood regulation strategies. The present study investigated such strategies among 195 volunteer athletes. Participants completed the Regulation of Feelings Scale, a 37-item measure assessing frequency of use and perceived effectiveness of strategies to reduce feelings of anger, confusion, depression, fatigue, tension, and increase feelings of vigour on the day of a competition. The most popular strategies were “engage in physical pre-competition activities”, “spend time alone”, “give myself a pep talk”, “talk to someone about my feelings”, and “use humour”. Frequency of use and perceived effectiveness of strategies varied according to the specific mood dimension athletes sought to regulate. Strategies did not differ by gender, type of sport, or level of competition, but the order in which strategies were presented to the athletes influenced their responses. Exploratory factor analyses for each of the six mood dimensions did not support a theoretical model, which proposed that mood regulation strategies can be grouped into four types – behavioural distraction, behavioural engagement, cognitive distraction, and cognitive engagement. The present findings provide a rich source of information that may help to guide interventions among applied practitioners
Emotion and emotion regulation from the perspective of the practitioner
This is an accepted manuscript of a book chapter published by Routledge in Feelings in Sport Theory, Research, and Practical Implications for Performance and Well-being, available online: https://www.routledge.com/Feelings-in-Sport-Theory-Research-and-Practical-Implications-for-Performance/Ruiz-Robazza/p/book/9780367253813
The accepted version of the publication may differ from the final published version.Published versio
Seeking Optimum System Settings for Physical Activity Recognition on Smartwatches
Physical activity recognition (PAR) using wearable devices can provide valued
information regarding an individual's degree of functional ability and
lifestyle. In this regards, smartphone-based physical activity recognition is a
well-studied area. Research on smartwatch-based PAR, on the other hand, is
still in its infancy. Through a large-scale exploratory study, this work aims
to investigate the smartwatch-based PAR domain. A detailed analysis of various
feature banks and classification methods are carried out to find the optimum
system settings for the best performance of any smartwatch-based PAR system for
both personal and impersonal models. To further validate our hypothesis for
both personal (The classifier is built using the data only from one specific
user) and impersonal (The classifier is built using the data from every user
except the one under study) models, we tested single subject validation process
for smartwatch-based activity recognition.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figures, Accepted in CVC'1
The diagnosis of mental disorders: the problem of reification
A pressing need for interrater reliability in the diagnosis of mental disorders
emerged during the mid-twentieth century, prompted in part by
the development of diverse new treatments. The Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), third edition answered this need
by introducing operationalized diagnostic criteria that were field-tested
for interrater reliability. Unfortunately, the focus on reliability came at a
time when the scientific understanding of mental disorders was embryonic
and could not yield valid disease definitions. Based on accreting
problems with the current DSM-fourth edition (DSM-IV) classification,
it is apparent that validity will not be achieved simply by refining
criteria for existing disorders or by the addition of new disorders. Yet
DSM-IV diagnostic criteria dominate thinking about mental disorders
in clinical practice, research, treatment development, and law. As a result,
the modernDSMsystem, intended to create a shared language, also
creates epistemic blinders that impede progress toward valid diagnoses.
Insights that are beginning to emerge from psychology, neuroscience,
and genetics suggest possible strategies for moving forward
Mood responses and regulation strategies used during COVID-19 among boxers and coaches
© 2021 The Authors. Published by Frontiers Media. This is an open access article available under a Creative Commons licence.
The published version can be accessed at the following link on the publisher’s website: https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.624119The COVID-19 pandemic brought unprecedented changes to daily life and in the first wave in the UK, it led to a societal shutdown including playing sport and concern was placed for the mental health of athletes. Identifying mood states experienced in lockdown and self-regulating strategies is useful for the development of interventions to help mood management. Whilst this can be done on a general level, examination of sport-specific effects and the experience of athletes and coaches can help develop interventions grounded in real world experiences. The present study investigated perceived differences in mood states of boxers before and during COVID-19 isolation in the first lockdown among boxers. Boxing is an individual and high-contact sport where training tends to form a key aspect of their identity. Boxers develop close relationships with their coach and boxing. Hence boxers were vulnerable to experiencing negative mood, and support via the coach was potentially unavailable. Participants were 58 experienced participants (44 boxers, male n = 33, female n = 11; 14 boxing coaches, male n = 11, female n = 3). Boxers completed the Brunel Mood Scale to assess mood before COVID-19 using a retrospective approach and during COVID-19 using a “right now” time frame. Boxers responded to open-ended questions to capture mood regulation strategies used. Coaches responded to open ended questions to capture how they helped regulate boxer’s mood. MANOVA results indicated a large significant increase in the intensity of unpleasant moods (anger, confusion, depression, fatigue, and tension) and reduction in vigor during COVID-19 (d = 0.93). Using Lane and Terry (2000) conceptual framework, results showed participants reporting depressed mood also reported an extremely negative mood profile as hypothesized. Qualitative data indicated that effective mood-regulation strategies used included maintaining close coach-athlete contact and helping create a sense of making progress in training. When seen collectively, findings illustrate that mood state responses to COVID-19 were severe. It is suggested that that active self-regulation and self-care should be a feature of training programmes to aid coaches and boxers in regulating mood when faced with severe situational changes.Published versio
- …