INSTRUMENTATION AND MOTIVATIONS FOR ORGANISED CYCLING: THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CYCLIST MOTIVATION INSTRUMENT (CMI)

'Serious leisure' cycling has developed as a reinterpretation of the traditional form of the sport. This short term, informal, unstructured and unconventional conceptualisation represents a challenge to participant numbers in the mainstream sport. The purpose of this study was twofold: (i)...

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Main Authors: Trent D. Brown, Justen P. O'Connor, Anastasios N. Barkatsas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Uludag 2009-06-01
Series:Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jssm.org/vol8/n2/7/v8n2-7text.php
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spelling doaj-0c68851a803b4fd89647af7b8790aa672020-11-24T21:56:41ZengUniversity of UludagJournal of Sports Science and Medicine1303-29682009-06-0182211218INSTRUMENTATION AND MOTIVATIONS FOR ORGANISED CYCLING: THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CYCLIST MOTIVATION INSTRUMENT (CMI)Trent D. BrownJusten P. O'ConnorAnastasios N. Barkatsas'Serious leisure' cycling has developed as a reinterpretation of the traditional form of the sport. This short term, informal, unstructured and unconventional conceptualisation represents a challenge to participant numbers in the mainstream sport. The purpose of this study was twofold: (i) to ascertain the cultural, subcultural and ecological factors of participation in this new conceptualised form enabling clubs, associations and governments to a deeper understanding about participants practices and (ii) as an ongoing validation to previous qualitative work (see O'Connor and Brown, 2005). This study reports on the development and psychometric properties (principal components analysis, confirmatory factor analysis) of the Cyclists' Motivation Instrument. Four hundred and twenty two cyclists (371 males, 51 females) who were registered members of the state competitive cycling body completed a fifty-one item instrument. Five factors were identified: social, embodiment, self-presentation, exploring environments and physical health outcomes and these accounted for 47.2% of the variance. Factor alpha coefficients ranged from .63 to .88, overall scale reliability was .92, suggesting moderate to high reliability for each of the factors and the overall scale. http://www.jssm.org/vol8/n2/7/v8n2-7text.phpBicyclingcyclistsmotivationscale validationinstrumentsocial ecology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Trent D. Brown
Justen P. O'Connor
Anastasios N. Barkatsas
spellingShingle Trent D. Brown
Justen P. O'Connor
Anastasios N. Barkatsas
INSTRUMENTATION AND MOTIVATIONS FOR ORGANISED CYCLING: THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CYCLIST MOTIVATION INSTRUMENT (CMI)
Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Bicycling
cyclists
motivation
scale validation
instrument
social ecology
author_facet Trent D. Brown
Justen P. O'Connor
Anastasios N. Barkatsas
author_sort Trent D. Brown
title INSTRUMENTATION AND MOTIVATIONS FOR ORGANISED CYCLING: THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CYCLIST MOTIVATION INSTRUMENT (CMI)
title_short INSTRUMENTATION AND MOTIVATIONS FOR ORGANISED CYCLING: THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CYCLIST MOTIVATION INSTRUMENT (CMI)
title_full INSTRUMENTATION AND MOTIVATIONS FOR ORGANISED CYCLING: THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CYCLIST MOTIVATION INSTRUMENT (CMI)
title_fullStr INSTRUMENTATION AND MOTIVATIONS FOR ORGANISED CYCLING: THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CYCLIST MOTIVATION INSTRUMENT (CMI)
title_full_unstemmed INSTRUMENTATION AND MOTIVATIONS FOR ORGANISED CYCLING: THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE CYCLIST MOTIVATION INSTRUMENT (CMI)
title_sort instrumentation and motivations for organised cycling: the development of the cyclist motivation instrument (cmi)
publisher University of Uludag
series Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
issn 1303-2968
publishDate 2009-06-01
description 'Serious leisure' cycling has developed as a reinterpretation of the traditional form of the sport. This short term, informal, unstructured and unconventional conceptualisation represents a challenge to participant numbers in the mainstream sport. The purpose of this study was twofold: (i) to ascertain the cultural, subcultural and ecological factors of participation in this new conceptualised form enabling clubs, associations and governments to a deeper understanding about participants practices and (ii) as an ongoing validation to previous qualitative work (see O'Connor and Brown, 2005). This study reports on the development and psychometric properties (principal components analysis, confirmatory factor analysis) of the Cyclists' Motivation Instrument. Four hundred and twenty two cyclists (371 males, 51 females) who were registered members of the state competitive cycling body completed a fifty-one item instrument. Five factors were identified: social, embodiment, self-presentation, exploring environments and physical health outcomes and these accounted for 47.2% of the variance. Factor alpha coefficients ranged from .63 to .88, overall scale reliability was .92, suggesting moderate to high reliability for each of the factors and the overall scale.
topic Bicycling
cyclists
motivation
scale validation
instrument
social ecology
url http://www.jssm.org/vol8/n2/7/v8n2-7text.php
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