University of Wollongong
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The relationship between implicit beliefs, anxiety, and attributional style in high-level soccer players

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posted on 2024-11-16, 06:37 authored by Lauren Gardner, Stewart VellaStewart Vella, Christopher Magee
This study investigated whether attributional style mediated the relationship between implicit beliefs and competition anxiety. Seventy-two soccer players completed the Conceptions of the Nature of Athletic Ability Questionnaire-Version 2, Sports Competition Anxiety Test, and short form Sports Attributional Style Scale. Entity beliefs were associated with heightened anxiety. Incremental beliefs were associated with lowered anxiety. Uncontrollable and global attributions mediated the relationship between entity beliefs and anxiety. Controllable and specific attributions mediated the relationship between incremental beliefs and anxiety. The social-cognitive model of achievement motivation appears to apply to the sporting domain and may facilitate anxiety and attribution research.

Funding

Short sleep as a cause of obesity: a longitudinal examination of Australian children and adults

Australian Research Council

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Citation

Gardner, L. A., Vella, S. A. & Magee, C. A. (2015). The relationship between implicit beliefs, anxiety, and attributional style in high-level soccer players. Journal of Applied Sport Psychology, 27 (4), 398-411.

Journal title

Journal of Applied Sport Psychology

Volume

27

Issue

4

Pagination

398-411

Language

English

RIS ID

100627

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