Abstract

The authors investigated relationships between emotions, coping, and resilience across two studies. In Study 1a, 319 athletes completed dispositional questionnaires relating to the aforementioned constructs. In Study 1b, 126 athletes from Study 1a repeated the same questionnaires 6months later. In Study 2, 21 athletes were randomly allocated to an emotional (e.g.,pleasant or unpleasant emotions) or control group and undertook a laboratory-based reaction-time task across three time points. Questionnaires and salivary cortisol samples were collected before and after each performance with imagery-based emotional manipulations engendered during the second testing session. Partial longitudinal evidence of the broaden-and-build effects of pleasant emotions was found. Pleasant emotions may undo lingering cognitive resource losses incurred from previous unpleasant emotional experiences. In Study 2, pleasant and unpleasant emotions had an immediate and sustained psychophysiological and performance impact. Taken together, this research supports the application of broaden-and-build theory in framing emotional interventions for athletes.

Highlights

  • No missing data or outliers were found whilst all constructs exhibited acceptable univariate skewness (

  • Pleasant emotions were positively related to both task-oriented coping (β= .362, p< .001, 95% CI = .206, .517) and resilience (β= .232, p< .001, 95% CI = .125, .338), whilst unpleasant emotions were positively related to distraction- (β= .207, p< .001, 95% CI = .110, .304) and disengagement-oriented coping (β= .641, p< .001, 95% CI = .575, .708)

  • The aim of Study 1a was to assess the applicability of the broaden-and-build theory of emotions (BaB) theory of positive emotions (Fredrickson, 2001) within a sporting population

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Summary

Methods

Participants had an average playing experience of 10.43 years (SD = 8.82) and took part in a variety of both team and individual sports (e.g. football, badminton, and long-distance running). Participating athletes competed at international (n = 15), national (n= 28), county (n= 41), club (n = 171), and beginner (n = 64) levels. The Sports Emotion Questionnaire (SEQ; Jones et al, 2005) measured athlete emotions. As this study measured the dispositional emotions of athletes rather than their state emotions, the participant instructions were slightly altered. The instruction “indicate on the scale next to each item how you feel at this moment, in relation to your upcoming competition” was modified to read “indicate on the scale next to each item how you normally feel in relation to participating in your chosen sport”

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