Anxiety, ego depletion and sports performance

In the present article, we analyzed the role of self-control strength and state anxiety in sports performance. We tested the hypothesis that self-control strength and state anxiety interact in predicting sports performance on the basis of two studies, each using a different sports task (Study 1: performance in a basketball free throw task, N = 64; Study 2: performance in a dart task, N = 79). The patterns of results were as expected in both studies: Participants with depleted self-control strength performed worse in the specific tasks as their anxiety increased, whereas there was no significant relation for participants with fully available self-control strength. Furthermore, different degrees of available self-control strength did not predict performance in participants who were low in state anxiety, but did in participants who were high in state anxiety. Thus increasing self-control strength could reduce the negative anxiety effects in sports and improve athletes` performance under pressure.
© Copyright 2012 Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology. Human Kinetics. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:social sciences sport games
Published in:Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology
Language:English
Published: 2012
Online Access:http://journals.humankinetics.com/jsep-back-issues/jsep-volume-34-issue-5-october/anxiety-ego-depletion-and-sports-performance
Volume:34
Issue:5
Pages:580-599
Document types:article
Level:advanced