This summary contains the chapters that must be learned for the third-year course Sport and Performance Psychology at the University of Groningen. See the first page for a table of contents. Good luck with studying! :)
Sport and Performance Psychology (PSB3E-OP01) - Minor Sport Science
What difference can a Sports Psychologist make to sporting performance? Essay
All for this textbook (3)
Written for
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen (RuG)
Psychologie
Sport and performance psychology (PSB3EOP01)
All documents for this subject (9)
Seller
Follow
svh01
Reviews received
Content preview
Summary
Sport and Performance Psychology
Introduction
- Chapter 1 – Introducing sport psychology: discipline and profession
Part 1 Exploring athletic performance: key constructs
- Chapter 2 – Motivation and goal-setting in sport
- Chapter 3 – ‘’Psyching up’’ and calming down: anxiety in sport
- Chapter 4 – Emotions and coping
- Chapter 5 – Staying focused in sport: concentration in sport performers
- Chapter 6 – Using imagination in sport: mental imagery, motor imagery and mental
practice in athletes
- Chapter 7 – What lies beneath the surface? Investigating expertise in sport
Part 2 Team cohesion
- Chapter 8 – Exploring team cohesion in sport: a critical perspective
Part 3 New directions in sport psychology
- Chapter 9 – New horizons: embodied cognition and cultural sport psychology
Important lecture slides and notes are incorporated in the corresponding chapters.
,Introduction
Chapter 1 – Introducing sport psychology: discipline and profession
Introduction
Although sport is played with the body, it is won in the mind.
Self-efficacy = the belief that one has the capacity to perform a given task and to achieve a specific
goal.
Mental toughness, confidence, and the ability to concentrate effectively are factors which distinguish
top athletes from less successful counterparts.
- The key to mental toughness is a level of self-belief that is robust and resilient in the face of
obstacles and setbacks.
Mental training is typically directed at avoiding performing losses --> focus on how you play and
ignore internal and external distractors.
Implications for mental practice:
- Mental practice for performance gains should focus on:
o Developing mental skills and enhancing sustainable motivation.
o Improving one’s expertise (level and consistency).
o Optimizing opportunities to develop and to train.
- Mental practice for performance losses should focus on:
o Enhancing the ability and motivation to effectively self-regulate during performance.
o Developing the competencies to utilize when performing.
o Optimizing the opportunities to perform well (e.g. materials, food, sleep).
The mental side of sport
There are four aspects of athletic performance:
- Physical --> fitness, strength and stamina which can be measured objectively.
- Technical --> the proficiency with which athletes can execute required fundamental skills.
- Tactical --> strategic aspects of athletic performance, like planning and decision making.
- Psychological/mental --> anxiety for example may lead to mistakes.
o Asking athletes what they have learned about mental factors that affect their
performance has two limitations:
It is hard to be unbiased when editing or analyzing interview data.
People see what they believe, rather than believe what they see.
, As athletes’ insights are invariably sport-specific, they are rather limited in
their generality of application.
Some sports are predictable (snooker), and some sports have
unknown variables (sailing with wind speed and direction).
What is confidence?
Confidence = the belief that one has the internal resources, particularly abilities, to achieve success.
- It is situation-specific --> a person may be more confident at the baseline than in volleying at
the net.
What is mental toughness? Meaning and measurement
Mental toughness = determination, resilience and/or an exceptional immunity to pressure situations.
- It enables athletes to react well to adversity and to persist in the face of setbacks.
Hardiness = a set of personality characteristics that enables people to mitigate the adverse effects of
stressful situations. Hardiness consists of:
- Control = the capacity to feel and act as if one could exert an influence in the situation.
- Challenge = the habit of perceiving potentially stressful situations as positive opportunities
rather than as threats.
- Commitment = stickability or the extent to which someone is likely to persist with a goal/task
4C’s model of mental toughness = hardiness (control, challenge, and commitment) + confidence.
- Confidence = a strong belief in one’s ability to complete a task successfully.
According to the 4C’s model, mentally tough athletes are people who have a high sense of self-belief
and an unshakeable faith that they can control their own destiny. They remain relatively unaffected
by competition or adversity.
Personal construct psychology = an approach that emphasizes the unique ways in which people
perceive and strive to make sense of their experience.
- Mental toughness comprised both general and specific components.
o General component --> having a natural or developed psychological edge to cope
better with competitive lifestyle and training demands than one’s rivals.
o Specific component --> the capacity to remain more determined, focused, confident
and in control than one’s rivals.
Four key dimensions of mental toughness:
- The attitudes and beliefs of the performer (mindset).
- Training (e.g., using long-term goals as motivation and pushing oneself to the limit).
- Competition (e.g., the ability to handle pressure).
- Post-competition (e.g., the ability to handle failure and setbacks).
To enhance mental toughness, coaches emphasize the importance of developing two characteristics
--> independence and resourcefulness (e.g., increasing self-awareness and encouraging reflection).
‘’Sports are 90% mental’’ --> agree or disagree.
- Disagree:
o If people lack the competence (do not have the fitness, strength, technical and
tactical skills required), the mental piece is completely irrelevant.
o People overestimate the impact of mental factors. Amateur athletes tend to explain
their inconsistency or lack of progress to mental factors (‘’It is between my ears’’).
, o Low-competent individuals typically perform inconsistently, also in low pressure
situations. So, competence rather than mental factors determine performance.
- Agree:
o When competing against an opponent of similar ability, mental factors make the
difference. Why? Mental factors are more sensitive to pressure situations than
physical, technical, and tactical factors.
o Mental factors determine athletes’ performance losses.
o Mental factors facilitate the development of expertise (i.e., performance gains).
The opportunity to perform is influenced by:
- Social support.
- Athlete support programs.
- Birthdate (the relative age effect) --> phenomenon by which children born early in the year
perform better than children born later in the same year.
- Birthplace.
Developing your critical thinking skills
Critical thinking = form of intelligent criticism which helps people to reach independent and
justifiable conclusions about their experiences.
Critical thinking comprises a motivational component and a cognitive component.
- Motivational --> adoption of open-mindedness, inquisitiveness, and skepticism.
- Cognitive --> analysis, evaluation, inference, deductive reasoning, and inductive reasoning.
Steps in critical thinking:
- Interpret the credibility of a source of information.
o ‘’What is the claim/conclusion that I am being asked to believe and who or what is
the source of that claim?’’
- Analyze a source.
o ‘’What type of evidence is used to support the claim(s)?’’
o Arguments generally fall into three camps --> fact, theory or faith.
- Evaluate the information.
o ‘’How valid is the evidence? What type of evidence would reject the claim?’’
o Establish the validity and reliability of the information.
- Use inference to establish whether there are alternative explanations for the evidence
provided.
- Explain the most likely conclusion based on available evidence.
- Consolidate what you know by establishing links between information (self-regulation).
Sport psychology as an academic discipline
Sport psychology = the application of psychological theory and methods to understand the
performance, mental processes and well-being of people who engage in sport.
Social facilitation = the capacity of rival performers to liberate latent energy not ordinarily available.
The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:
Guaranteed quality through customer reviews
Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.
Quick and easy check-out
You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.
Focus on what matters
Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!
Frequently asked questions
What do I get when I buy this document?
You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.
Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?
Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.
Who am I buying these notes from?
Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller svh01. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.
Will I be stuck with a subscription?
No, you only buy these notes for $7.05. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.