Latent profiles of elite Malaysian athletes’ use of psychological skills and techniques and relations with mental toughness

Background The majority of past work on athletes’ use of psychological skills and techniques (PSTs) has adopted a variable-centered approach in which the statistical relations among study variables are averaged across a sample. However, variable-centered-analyses exclude the possibility that PSTs ma...

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Main Authors: Vellapandian Ponnusamy, Robin L.J. Lines, Chun-Qing Zhang, Daniel F. Gucciardi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2018-05-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/4778.pdf
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spelling doaj-755d658904a147d4a28f125bad86a7a82020-11-24T22:34:14ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592018-05-016e477810.7717/peerj.4778Latent profiles of elite Malaysian athletes’ use of psychological skills and techniques and relations with mental toughnessVellapandian Ponnusamy0Robin L.J. Lines1Chun-Qing Zhang2Daniel F. Gucciardi3Institut Sukan Negara, National Sports Institute of Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, MalaysiaSchool of Physiotherapy and Exercise Science, Curtin University, Perth, WA, AustraliaDepartment of Physical Education, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong, ChinaSchool of Physiotherapy and Exercise Science, Curtin University, Perth, WA, AustraliaBackground The majority of past work on athletes’ use of psychological skills and techniques (PSTs) has adopted a variable-centered approach in which the statistical relations among study variables are averaged across a sample. However, variable-centered-analyses exclude the possibility that PSTs may be used in tandem or combined in different ways across practice and competition settings. With this empirical gap in mind, the purposes of this study were to identify the number and type of profiles of elite athletes’ use of PSTs, and examine differences between these clusters in terms of their self-reported mental toughness. Methods In this cross-sectional survey study, 285 Malaysian elite athletes (170 males, 115 females) aged 15–44 years (M = 18.89, SD = 4.49) completed measures of various PSTs and mental toughness. Latent profile analysis was employed to determine the type and number of profiles that best represent athletes’ reports of their use of PSTs in practice and competition settings, and examine differences between these classes in terms of self-reported mental toughness. Results Our results revealed three profiles (low, moderate, high use) in both practice and competition settings that were distinguished primarily according to quantitative differences in the absolute levels of reported use across most of the PSTs assessed in practice and competition settings, which in turn, were differentially related with mental toughness. Specifically, higher use of PSTs was associated with higher levels of mental toughness. Conclusion This study provides one of the first analyses of the different configurations of athletes’ use of PSTs that typify unique subgroups of performers. An important next step is to examine the longitudinal (in) stability of such classes and therefore provide insight into the temporal dynamics of different configurations of athletes’ use of PSTs.https://peerj.com/articles/4778.pdfLatent profile analysisMentally toughPerson-centered analysisPsychological skills training
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vellapandian Ponnusamy
Robin L.J. Lines
Chun-Qing Zhang
Daniel F. Gucciardi
spellingShingle Vellapandian Ponnusamy
Robin L.J. Lines
Chun-Qing Zhang
Daniel F. Gucciardi
Latent profiles of elite Malaysian athletes’ use of psychological skills and techniques and relations with mental toughness
PeerJ
Latent profile analysis
Mentally tough
Person-centered analysis
Psychological skills training
author_facet Vellapandian Ponnusamy
Robin L.J. Lines
Chun-Qing Zhang
Daniel F. Gucciardi
author_sort Vellapandian Ponnusamy
title Latent profiles of elite Malaysian athletes’ use of psychological skills and techniques and relations with mental toughness
title_short Latent profiles of elite Malaysian athletes’ use of psychological skills and techniques and relations with mental toughness
title_full Latent profiles of elite Malaysian athletes’ use of psychological skills and techniques and relations with mental toughness
title_fullStr Latent profiles of elite Malaysian athletes’ use of psychological skills and techniques and relations with mental toughness
title_full_unstemmed Latent profiles of elite Malaysian athletes’ use of psychological skills and techniques and relations with mental toughness
title_sort latent profiles of elite malaysian athletes’ use of psychological skills and techniques and relations with mental toughness
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Background The majority of past work on athletes’ use of psychological skills and techniques (PSTs) has adopted a variable-centered approach in which the statistical relations among study variables are averaged across a sample. However, variable-centered-analyses exclude the possibility that PSTs may be used in tandem or combined in different ways across practice and competition settings. With this empirical gap in mind, the purposes of this study were to identify the number and type of profiles of elite athletes’ use of PSTs, and examine differences between these clusters in terms of their self-reported mental toughness. Methods In this cross-sectional survey study, 285 Malaysian elite athletes (170 males, 115 females) aged 15–44 years (M = 18.89, SD = 4.49) completed measures of various PSTs and mental toughness. Latent profile analysis was employed to determine the type and number of profiles that best represent athletes’ reports of their use of PSTs in practice and competition settings, and examine differences between these classes in terms of self-reported mental toughness. Results Our results revealed three profiles (low, moderate, high use) in both practice and competition settings that were distinguished primarily according to quantitative differences in the absolute levels of reported use across most of the PSTs assessed in practice and competition settings, which in turn, were differentially related with mental toughness. Specifically, higher use of PSTs was associated with higher levels of mental toughness. Conclusion This study provides one of the first analyses of the different configurations of athletes’ use of PSTs that typify unique subgroups of performers. An important next step is to examine the longitudinal (in) stability of such classes and therefore provide insight into the temporal dynamics of different configurations of athletes’ use of PSTs.
topic Latent profile analysis
Mentally tough
Person-centered analysis
Psychological skills training
url https://peerj.com/articles/4778.pdf
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