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Social Support and Performance in a Golf-Putting Experiment
Authors
P Freeman
T Rees
Publication date
6 February 2015
Publisher
'Human Kinetics'
Abstract
publication-status: Publishedtypes: Articleas accepted for publication© 2010 Human Kinetics, Inc.This study examined the impact of a social support manipulation on performance. Participants with high and low levels of perceived support were randomly assigned to an experimental support or control condition, before completing a golf-putting task. Participants with high levels of perceived support performed at a higher level than those with low levels of perceived support. Participants in the support condition performed at a higher level than those in the control condition. A significant interaction was primarily attributable to the low perceived support participants in the support condition performing better than the low perceived support participants in the control condition. Participants in the support condition also experienced less frequent and distracting task-irrelevant thoughts compared with those in the control condition. These results suggest that experimentally manipulated support may lead to improvements in the performance of novices completing a golf-putting task, and that such support may be particularly important for those low in perceived support
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Last time updated on 03/08/2016