Sport And Exercise Psychology: A Critical Introduction

(John Hannent) #1
manipulation of
certain
variables and
control of
others

measurement ii Precise
control of
independent
Variables
iii Causal
inference
possible

always possible
to generalise
results beyond
lab. setting
ii Vulnerable to
certain biases

effects various
secondary tasks
on implicit motor
skill performance

Surveys
questionnaires
and
psychology
tests

To measure
people’s
attitudes,
beliefs and/or
abilities

Quantitative or
qualitative

i Easy to
administer,
score and
analyse
ii Can be
tailored to
specific
populations

i Limited to
conscious
experiences and
processes
ii Vulnerable to
certain biases

Hall Mack Paivio
& Hausenblas
Hausenbias
(1998) developed
a test to measure
imagery use in
athletes

Interviews and
focus groups

To explore
people’s
knowledge and
experiences of a
topic “in depth”

Qualitative
(main themes)
and quantitative
(e,g., frequency
analysis of key
words)

i Richness of
data collected
ii Flexible
iii Can lead to
“grounded
theory”

i Very
laboriousand
time-
consuming to
ana1yse
ii Interviewer
may
contaminate
findings

Jones Hanton &
Connaughton
(2002) explored
athletes’
understanding of
“mental
toughness”

Case studies To provide an
intensive
analysis of a
single case or
exampe

Qualitative Can yield
detailed
information of
a phenomenon
over time

Difficult to
generalise from
findings

Krane Greenleaf
& Snow (1997)
studied the
motivation of an
elite gymnsat
Naturalistic
observation

To observe and
analyse
naturally
occurring
behaviour in
real-life settings

Qualitative Can help to
understand the
nature and
context of
certain
behaviour

i No
experimental
control over
variables
ii Presence of
observer may
influence
findings

Muir (1991)
conducted a
participant
observation study
of behaviour in a
tennis club

Applied consultancy work

This category of sport psychology services may be subdivided into two types of work:
advice on performance enhancement and the provision of counselling/clinical psychology
services. Let us consider these activities separately.
The most obvious reason why athletes consult sport psychologists is to gain practical
advice on ways of improving their mental preparation and/or competitive performance.
Such requests may come directly as self-referrals or indirectly through coaches, general
practitioners, governing bodies of sports and/or national “carding schemes” whereby elite
athletes may be given funded access to medical and sport science advisers. Typically,
these consultations are motivated by a desire to realise some unfulfilled athletic potential


Sport and exercise psychology: A critical introduction 18
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