Anxiety in Athletes: Gender and Type of Sport Differences

The study of anxiety, specifically its relations with sociodemographic variables, has been fruitfull in sport psychology research. This study aimed to investigate athletes’ sport anxiety regarding differences in gender and sport played. An application of structural equation modeling was made, with 6...

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Main Authors: Marco Estêvão Correia, António Rosado
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de San Buenaventura 2019-05-01
Series:International Journal of Psychological Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.usb.edu.co/index.php/IJPR/article/view/3552/3302
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spelling doaj-63c9a5eb91c440139dbb8d1e16849cdb2020-11-24T22:04:45ZengUniversidad de San BuenaventuraInternational Journal of Psychological Research2011-20842011-79222019-05-0112191710.21500/20112084.3552Anxiety in Athletes: Gender and Type of Sport DifferencesMarco Estêvão Correia0António Rosado1Department of Sport & Health, Faculty of Human Kinetics, University of LisbonDepartment of Sport & Health, Faculty of Human Kinetics, University of LisbonThe study of anxiety, specifically its relations with sociodemographic variables, has been fruitfull in sport psychology research. This study aimed to investigate athletes’ sport anxiety regarding differences in gender and sport played. An application of structural equation modeling was made, with 601 Portuguese athletes. From them 172 (28.6%) were female and 429 (71.4%) were male. They competed in a variety of individual (e.g., athletics, climbing, orienteering, surfing, swimming, tennis; 42.6%) and team sports (e.g., basketball, handball, rugby, soccer, volleyball; 57.4%). Participants’ age ranged from 12 to 47 years (M = 17.44 years; SD = 4.99). After testing the measurement invariance of the first and second-order models, across gender and type of sport (individual vs. team), latent mean comparisons were investigated and Cohen’s d (1988) statistic was computed to obtain the corresponding effect sizes (Kline, 2016). Significant differences were detected between male and female athletes and between individual and team sports. Female and individual sports athletes presented higher levels of general sports anxiety. The results of this research provided evidence that anxiety is appraised differently by athletes based on their gender and type of sport.https://revistas.usb.edu.co/index.php/IJPR/article/view/3552/3302AnxietySportsAthletesMeasurement Invariance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marco Estêvão Correia
António Rosado
spellingShingle Marco Estêvão Correia
António Rosado
Anxiety in Athletes: Gender and Type of Sport Differences
International Journal of Psychological Research
Anxiety
Sports
Athletes
Measurement Invariance
author_facet Marco Estêvão Correia
António Rosado
author_sort Marco Estêvão Correia
title Anxiety in Athletes: Gender and Type of Sport Differences
title_short Anxiety in Athletes: Gender and Type of Sport Differences
title_full Anxiety in Athletes: Gender and Type of Sport Differences
title_fullStr Anxiety in Athletes: Gender and Type of Sport Differences
title_full_unstemmed Anxiety in Athletes: Gender and Type of Sport Differences
title_sort anxiety in athletes: gender and type of sport differences
publisher Universidad de San Buenaventura
series International Journal of Psychological Research
issn 2011-2084
2011-7922
publishDate 2019-05-01
description The study of anxiety, specifically its relations with sociodemographic variables, has been fruitfull in sport psychology research. This study aimed to investigate athletes’ sport anxiety regarding differences in gender and sport played. An application of structural equation modeling was made, with 601 Portuguese athletes. From them 172 (28.6%) were female and 429 (71.4%) were male. They competed in a variety of individual (e.g., athletics, climbing, orienteering, surfing, swimming, tennis; 42.6%) and team sports (e.g., basketball, handball, rugby, soccer, volleyball; 57.4%). Participants’ age ranged from 12 to 47 years (M = 17.44 years; SD = 4.99). After testing the measurement invariance of the first and second-order models, across gender and type of sport (individual vs. team), latent mean comparisons were investigated and Cohen’s d (1988) statistic was computed to obtain the corresponding effect sizes (Kline, 2016). Significant differences were detected between male and female athletes and between individual and team sports. Female and individual sports athletes presented higher levels of general sports anxiety. The results of this research provided evidence that anxiety is appraised differently by athletes based on their gender and type of sport.
topic Anxiety
Sports
Athletes
Measurement Invariance
url https://revistas.usb.edu.co/index.php/IJPR/article/view/3552/3302
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AT antoniorosado anxietyinathletesgenderandtypeofsportdifferences
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