Athletes’ dispositional self-control, and their perceived influence of officials on their anxiety levels

In the sporting context, the study of stress has been largely themed around the anxiety-performance relationship. Although this relationship has been traditionally understood as negatively related, anxiety can also have a facilitative effect on performance. To this end, self-control plays a mediatin...

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Main Author: Raffeei, Nurhakimah
Other Authors: Lim Boon San Coral
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2016
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/66607
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-666072020-09-27T20:24:39Z Athletes’ dispositional self-control, and their perceived influence of officials on their anxiety levels Raffeei, Nurhakimah Lim Boon San Coral National Institute of Education DRNTU::Science In the sporting context, the study of stress has been largely themed around the anxiety-performance relationship. Although this relationship has been traditionally understood as negatively related, anxiety can also have a facilitative effect on performance. To this end, self-control plays a mediating role as it can help athletes channel the anxiety stimulus towards a more positive performance outcome. Studies have shown that athletes rely on informational cues to form impression of officials and that the latter represent as a highly rated source of stress. Despite this, the athlete-official relationship has been largely unexplored. As such, this study aims to investigate if athletes group meaningfully based on trait characteristics (self-control & anxiety) & whether they predispose athletes to perceive cues emitted by officials as salient in affecting their state anxiety. 147 athletes aged 18 to 34 years-old (Mage = 23.05, SDage = ± 3.98) from territorial/invasion sports participated in this research. They were administered a compiled set of scales & questionnaire measuring trait characteristics & state anxiety. Hierarchical cluster analysis revealed that athletes clustered in three distinct groups based on trait characteristics – 1. High Control, Low Anxiety (HCLA), 2. Low Control, High Anxiety (LCHA), 3. Low Control, Low Anxiety (LCLA). Additionally, these clusters had unique responses to perception of officials as influential in their state anxiety. In particular, the HCLA cluster rated these cues as least influential compared to the other two clusters. Therefore, the results suggests that possessing these trait characteristics do affect an athlete’s perceived influence of official on state anxiety. Key terms: Trait Self-control; Trait Anxiety; Athlete-official Relationship, dispositional Bachelor of Science (Sport Science and Management) 2016-04-19T00:58:04Z 2016-04-19T00:58:04Z 2016 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/66607 en 36 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science
Raffeei, Nurhakimah
Athletes’ dispositional self-control, and their perceived influence of officials on their anxiety levels
description In the sporting context, the study of stress has been largely themed around the anxiety-performance relationship. Although this relationship has been traditionally understood as negatively related, anxiety can also have a facilitative effect on performance. To this end, self-control plays a mediating role as it can help athletes channel the anxiety stimulus towards a more positive performance outcome. Studies have shown that athletes rely on informational cues to form impression of officials and that the latter represent as a highly rated source of stress. Despite this, the athlete-official relationship has been largely unexplored. As such, this study aims to investigate if athletes group meaningfully based on trait characteristics (self-control & anxiety) & whether they predispose athletes to perceive cues emitted by officials as salient in affecting their state anxiety. 147 athletes aged 18 to 34 years-old (Mage = 23.05, SDage = ± 3.98) from territorial/invasion sports participated in this research. They were administered a compiled set of scales & questionnaire measuring trait characteristics & state anxiety. Hierarchical cluster analysis revealed that athletes clustered in three distinct groups based on trait characteristics – 1. High Control, Low Anxiety (HCLA), 2. Low Control, High Anxiety (LCHA), 3. Low Control, Low Anxiety (LCLA). Additionally, these clusters had unique responses to perception of officials as influential in their state anxiety. In particular, the HCLA cluster rated these cues as least influential compared to the other two clusters. Therefore, the results suggests that possessing these trait characteristics do affect an athlete’s perceived influence of official on state anxiety. Key terms: Trait Self-control; Trait Anxiety; Athlete-official Relationship, dispositional
author2 Lim Boon San Coral
author_facet Lim Boon San Coral
Raffeei, Nurhakimah
format Final Year Project
author Raffeei, Nurhakimah
author_sort Raffeei, Nurhakimah
title Athletes’ dispositional self-control, and their perceived influence of officials on their anxiety levels
title_short Athletes’ dispositional self-control, and their perceived influence of officials on their anxiety levels
title_full Athletes’ dispositional self-control, and their perceived influence of officials on their anxiety levels
title_fullStr Athletes’ dispositional self-control, and their perceived influence of officials on their anxiety levels
title_full_unstemmed Athletes’ dispositional self-control, and their perceived influence of officials on their anxiety levels
title_sort athletes’ dispositional self-control, and their perceived influence of officials on their anxiety levels
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/66607
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