challenge 2 sport psych

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Last updated 8:53 PM on 3/12/26
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74 Terms

1
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parasympathetic and sympathetic

autonomic nervous system

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rest and restore

anabolic process

parasympathetic nervous system

3
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fight or flight - acute stress response

catabolic process- breaking down

sympathetic nervous system

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increase blood glucose levels, increase cardiovascular output, increase blood flow to muscles, increase heart rate and blood pressure

symptoms of SAM

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chronic stress and releases stress hormone cortisol

HPA axis

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hypothalamus, pituitary, adrenal cortex

what structures are involved in the HPA axis

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hypothalamus -> anterior pituitary -> adrenal cortex -> cortisol

what is the order for the HPA axis?

8
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SAM and HPA axis

What are the two energy releasing systems?

9
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body's capacity to change while keeping stability

Allostasis

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prolonged chronic stress

body/immune system is dysregulated

allostatic load

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acute

chronic

derivational

anticipatory

secondary

primary

types of stress

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short term

what is acute stress

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long term

what is chronic stress

14
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low motivation, boredom

what is deprivational stress

15
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what is going to happen in the future

what is anticipatory stress

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what happened in the past ( should have's)

what is secondary stress

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what is happening right now

what is primary stress

18
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when arousal increases, attention narrows due to task-irrelevant cues

According to cue utilization theory, what happens to an individuals visual field when arousal increases

19
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1. too broad of a searchlight

2. searchlight pointed in the wrong direction

3. searchlight too narrow or unable to rapidly shift from one cue to another

how is performance impaired by arousal according to the searchlight method

20
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cognitive anxiety and somatic anxiety

what are the different forms of anxiety according to multi-dimensional anxiety theory?

21
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thought component (worry and apprehension)

cognitive anxiety

22
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Physiological effects of stress

Sweating, increased HR, feeling of nausea

somatic anxiety

23
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negative linear relationship

what is the relationship between cognitive anxiety and performance

24
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inverted U

what is the relationship between somatic anxiety and performance

25
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arousal is related to an individuals emotional experience

Reversal Theory

26
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person's effort to master a task, achieve excellence, overcome obstacles

achievement motivation

27
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individuals are motivated to demonstrate competence relative to self-referent standard - focused on improving their skills

Task Orientation

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individuals motivated to demonstrate competence in comparison to others

ego orientation

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- they are more punishment focused

- focus more attention on better players

-cultivate competition between players

how can a coach create a ego-oriented environment

30
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- emphasize effort

- individual improvement

- encourage cooperation

how can a coach create a task-oriented environment

31
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inner discourse that reflects and influences our cognitions about ourselves, outcomes and subsequent behaviors

self-talk

32
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instructional: direct attention and focus

motivational: increase energy or effort

types of self-talk

33
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when a capable individual underperforms under pressure

choking in sports

34
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1. athlete is capable of performing better/ athlete is highly skilled

2. athlete is motivated to perform well

3. athlete perceives situation to be important

what conditions must be present for a choke to occur

35
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in a competitive setting with a game on the line

according to Baumeister and showers when is the only time choking can happen

36
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heightened arousal causes peripheral narrowing of visual attention

ex: tunnel vision caused choking

cause of choking theory: Cue Utilization

37
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- inefficient processing of task-relevant information

- worry motivates one to increase effort in order to advert detrimental effects

e.g.: athlete overthinks or tries too hard thus performance declines

cause of choking theory: processing efficiency theory

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anxiety promotes the shifting of attention to threatening stimuli which results in shifting from task relevant cues to task-irrelevant cues

cause of choking theory: attentional control theory

39
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ability to resist distracting information

e.g.: a crazy fan jumping up and down

inhibition

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ability to control and shift attention to task relevant cues

shifting

41
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athlete focuses on already mastered skills and try and control one's movements will disrupt task processing and result in choking

conscious processing hypothesis

42
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focusing on the results of an action, rather than the body's movements, improves motor performance

Constrained Action Hypothesis

43
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_ prevents from achieving goals and purposes

- absolute or dogmatic; "must's", "should's"

- awfulizing - situation is more than 100% bad

- low frustration tolerance

- damnination- excessively critical to self

- perfectionism

Irrational Beliefs (Ellis)

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- one must be practical, logical, and reality based

- expressed in forms of "desires", "preferences", "wishes", "likes", and "dislikes"

- flexible

- does not impede progress towards one's goals

Rational Beliefs (Ellis)

45
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people acting according to their beliefs.

ex: the decision not to exercise is due to the irrational beliefs of the short term discomfort

According to the ABC's of REBT your beliefs about an activating event will lead to?

46
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tendency to explain success as internal, stable, and controllable while explaining failure as external, unstable, and uncontrollable

- done as an effort to preserve self-esteem and self-efficacy

self-serving bias

47
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challenge and threat

what are the two physiological states according to the biosychosocial model

48
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sympathetic-adrenal-medullary axis is activated

increase in cardiac output

vasodilation

what happens during challenge appraisal

49
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HPA axis is activated

decrease in cardiac output

vasoconstriction

what happens during threat appraisal

50
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The something to lose people had a threat appraisal response and the something to gain people had a challenge appraisal response

what were the differences in physiological response during the something to gain, something to lose study?

51
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anxiety

what is the result of negative biases about one's future?

52
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depression

what is the result of negative biases about ones past?

53
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similar to social anxiety but occurs during sports performance

what is self-presentational stress

54
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woman in an exercise class with see through windows, a weird guy, revealing clothing, and a camera had low efficacy

woman in an exercise class with covered windows, normal clothing, and no weird guy had high-efficacy

what happened in the study of self-presentational efficacy?

55
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Informational - (Damn I'm Good), seen as conformation of one's abilities or as useful information; fosters intrinsic motivation and positive relationships

controlling- create demands for meeting a specific standard, undermine intrinsic motivation, create unhealthy strain on relationships

what are 2 ways to perceive/interpret external rewards or sources of motivation, according to the cognitive evaluative theory?

56
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an intentional and preemptive act to divert blame from self

- making excuses

- withholding effort or practice

- procrastinating

- use of alcohol or drugs

self-handicapping

57
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prior to the performance

when does self-handicapping happen

58
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self-preservation, fear of failure

- win-win situation

why do athletes self-handicap/ what psychological constructs are they trying to maintain

59
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demands are coming from within the individual

- decreases self-esteem

who is the source in intra-psychic regulation?

60
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knowledge - learning and exploring

accomplishment - mastering a skill

stimulation - fun, exciting, aesthetic pleasure

what are sources of intrinsic motivation

61
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a desire to perform a behavior to receive promised rewards or avoid threatened punishment

What is extrinsic motivation?

62
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peers, parents, bosses, intra-psyche, to validate self-esteem and ego-involvement

Sources of extrinsic motivation

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external regulation

- least autonomous

- motivated to obtain a reward or avoid a punishment

stage 1 of organismic integration theory

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introjection regulation

- taking in an external contingency, demand, or regulation but not accepting it as their own

- going to run hills without a coach telling them to

stage 2 of organismic integration theory

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Identified regulation

- accepting the importance of the behavior for themselves and thus accepting it as their own

- no longer perceive external pressure

stage 3 of organismic integration theory

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integrated regulation

- most autonomous

- apart of identity

stage 4 of organismic integration theory

67
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physical, psychological, and socially

what are the 3 components of the basic need theory?

68
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autonomy: behavior matches one's values

competence: feelings of mastery

relatedness: being connected to significant others and reciprocity

how do the components of the basic need theory affect an individuals motivation

69
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- rules and standards

- explain the value and why it will benefit them in reaching their goals

- helps athlete but into the WHY

what does a coach providing a clear rational for a behavior or task do? How does it affect motivation?

70
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creates increased effort when others are watching/ create desired impressions

social facilitation

71
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can create the desire to work harder or perform at your highest level

how can social facilitation have a positive influence?

72
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as your interacting with the world or going towards a goal, then the feedback presents what to do next

- moment-to-moment between the person-environment relationship

- merging of action and awareness

emergent motivation

73
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Order-making experience

- process that make order of all the information being perceived

Autoelic experience

- the experience itself is a reward

make you feel:

- cognitively efficient, motivated, and happy

what experiences does an athlete have while being in the zone or flow?

74
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-changing thoughts: recognize the negative thought and replace it with a more positive thought

-countering: using facts to refute negative self-defeating assumptions

-reframing: change a weakness into a strength

what cognitive psychology strategies can be used to change or stop negative self-talk?

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