Self- and team-efficacy beliefs of rowers and their relation to mindfulness and flow

The present study explored self- and team-efficacy beliefs in rowers, examining the relations between efficacy beliefs, mindfulness, and flow. Fifty-eight rowers from nine teams completed sport-specific measures of self- and team-efficacy, along with questionnaires assessing mindfulness, flow, sport anxiety, and sport confidence. Self- and team-efficacy were significantly related to mindfulness, dispositional flow, and sport confidence. In addition, both self-efficacy and sport confidence mediated the association between both total mindfulness (and the describe dimension of mindfulness) and the challenge-skill balance dimension of flow. These results provide indirect support for a proposed model, which suggests that mindfulness may positively impact the integral challenge-skill balance aspect of flow in athletes through self-efficacy. ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR
© Copyright 2014 Journal of Clinical Sport Psychology. Human Kinetics. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:biological and medical sciences social sciences endurance sports
Tagging:Psychometrie
Published in:Journal of Clinical Sport Psychology
Language:English
Published: 2014
Online Access:http://journals.humankinetics.com/jcsp-current-issue/jcsp-volume-8-issue-2-june/self-and-team-efficacy-beliefs-of-rowers-and-their-relation-to-mindfulness-and-flow
Volume:8
Issue:2
Pages:142-158
Document types:article
Level:advanced