Éditeur(s) :
HAL CCSD Human Kinetics Résumé : International audience
The purpose of the present experiment was to examine whether the use of self-handicapping strategies influences participants' anxiety levels before athletic performance. Seventy-one competitive basketball players participated in the study. A repeated measures design was used, such that state cognitive and somatic anxiety intensity and direction were measured before and after participants were given the opportunity to self-handicap. Overall, participants reported their cognitive anxiety to be more facilitating after they had the opportunity to self-handicap. Thus, participants who were given the opportunity to self-handicap (i.e., use claimed and behavioral self-handicaps), reported greater increases in perceptions of cog-nitive anxiety as facilitating their performance. This study shows the importance of looking at anxiety direction, and not just anxiety intensity, when examining self-handicapping's effects on anxiety. Implications for sport psychologists are proposed.
ISSN: 1543-2793
Droits : info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess
hal-01343255
https://hal.univ-antilles.fr/hal-01343255 https://hal.univ-antilles.fr/hal-01343255/document https://hal.univ-antilles.fr/hal-01343255/file/TSP%2007-54.%20Final%20Manuscript.Self-handicapping%20and%20Anxiety%20in%20Sport%20HAL.pdf DOI : 10.1123/tsp.22.3.304