Abstract

Student athletes experience multiple stressors relating to both their sporting and academic commitments. Individual differences play a significant role in how well student athletes cope with the demands they face. When assessing individual differences in stress reactivity, there are a lack of valid alternatives to costly and time-consuming lab-based physiological methods (e.g., cortisol sampling, cardiac variables). This paper aims to further validate a self-report measure of adolescent athletes’ individual differences in perceived stress reactivity, by comparing to a psycho-physiological measure of emotion regulation (heart-rate variability) assessed during a socially evaluated cold pressor test. 30 student athletes and 31 student non-athletes completed a measure of perceived stress reactivity and took part in the socially evaluated cold pressor test while their heart-rate variability was assessed, along with their self-reported appraisals of stress, pain, and unpleasantness experienced during the procedure. Controlling for gender and athleticism, individual differences in perceived stress reactivity showed no associations with tonic or phasic levels of heart-rate variability. However, perceived stress reactivity was associated with levels of self-reported stress, pain, and unpleasantness experienced during the socially evaluated cold pressor test. These findings therefore suggest that perceived stress reactivity is associated with cognitive responses to stress (i.e., stress appraisals). However, further research is needed to confirm its relationship with physiological measures and responses. This further adds to the understanding of perceived stress reactivity, and validity of the perceived stress reactivity scale for adolescent athletes.

Highlights

  • Adolescent athletes experience a significant number of stressors when taking part in competitive sport (Reeves et al, 2011; Hayward et al, 2017)

  • This study refines the validity of the Perceived Stress Reactivity Scale for Adolescent Athletes (PSRS-AA) for assessing individual differences in adolescent athletes’ perceived stress reactivity (PSR)

  • Little support was obtained regarding the relationship between PSR and psycho-physiological indices of emotion regulation

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Summary

Introduction

Adolescent athletes experience a significant number of stressors when taking part in competitive sport (Reeves et al, 2011; Hayward et al, 2017). An adolescent’s sensitivity to stress is heightened during adolescence, due to their stage of neurological and physiological development (Romeo, 2010; Ahmed et al, 2015). These developments continue well into an individual’s mid-twenties (Blakemore and Choudhury, 2006). An inability to cope adaptively with stressors has been associated with increased levels of burnout and drop-out in youth sport and attributed to talented youth athletes’ struggling to succeed later in their careers at adult level (Holt and Dunn, 2004; Goodger et al, 2007; Crane and Temple, 2015)

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