Reactions to mistakes as a function of perfectionism and situation criticality in curling

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Deutscher übersetzter Titel:Reaktionen auf Fehler im Curling als Funktion von Perfektionismus und dem Grad der kritischen Situation
Autor:Lizmore, Michael R. ; Dunn, John G.H.; Causgrove Dunn, Janice
Erschienen in:International journal of sport psychology
Veröffentlicht:47 (2016), 1, S. 81-101, Lit.
Format: Literatur (SPOLIT)
Publikationstyp: Zeitschriftenartikel
Medienart: Gedruckte Ressource
Sprache:Englisch
ISSN:0047-0767, 1147-0767
DOI:10.7352/IJSP.2016.47.081
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Erfassungsnummer:PU201606003808
Quelle:BISp

Abstract des Autors

This study assessed the degree to which healthy and unhealthy perfectionists responded with different levels of anger, dejection, self-confidence, and optimism following mistakes in low- and high-criticality situations in competitive curling. A total of 343 athletes (M age = 30.78 years) completed measures of perfectionism, anger, dejection, self-confidence, and optimism in sport. Cluster analyses conducted on perfectionism responses produced three clusters – labelled healthy perfectionists, unhealthy perfectionists, and non-perfectionists – that mirrored a tripartite conceptualization of perfectionism (Stoeber & Otto, 2006). Regardless of situation criticality, healthy perfectionists reported lower anger/dejection and higher confidence/optimism following mistakes than unhealthy perfectionists (ps< .005). Regardless of perfectionism, athletes reported lower anger/dejection and higher confidence/optimism following mistakes in low- as opposed to high-criticality situations (ps < .001). It is recommended that future research should involve the examination of both personality and situatianal factors when assessing athletes' emotional and cognitive reactions to mistakes in competition.