The Influence of Positive Emotion and Sports Hope on Pre-competition State Anxiety in Martial Arts Players

ObjectivesThe present study proposes a model for the relationships among competitive martial arts players’ positive emotions, hope (path and emotive force ideas), sense of control, self-handicapping, and precompetition state anxiety (PCSA). The model seeks to advance our understanding around the cau...

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Main Authors: HuiXin Yang, XuPing Wen, Fei Xu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01460/full
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spelling doaj-9bd0c200fbc54f2d83b77ce00633a7f82020-11-25T03:35:14ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782020-07-011110.3389/fpsyg.2020.01460548327The Influence of Positive Emotion and Sports Hope on Pre-competition State Anxiety in Martial Arts PlayersHuiXin Yang0XuPing Wen1Fei Xu2College of National Traditional Sports, Harbin Sport University, Harbin, ChinaQiuzhen College, Huzhou University, Huzhou, ChinaCollege of National Traditional Sports, Harbin Sport University, Harbin, ChinaObjectivesThe present study proposes a model for the relationships among competitive martial arts players’ positive emotions, hope (path and emotive force ideas), sense of control, self-handicapping, and precompetition state anxiety (PCSA). The model seeks to advance our understanding around the causal and mediating effects between these variables and, thus, has important implications for theory and practice in the field of sports and exercise psychology.MethodA total of 327 participants (male: 255, female: 72; age: 21.45 ± 2.78 years; athletic training: 6.27 ± 2.54 years) in the China University Wushu Sanda Championship 2019 were surveyed. Within 2 h before the match, PCSA, sports hope, sense of control, anxiety, and self-handicapping were measured.ResultsThe findings of the present study showed that (1) positive emotions have a significant positive correlation with path and emotive force ideas, anxiety orientation, ability to cope, goal attainment, and sense of control; (2) path and emotive force ideas were significantly positively correlated with anxiety orientation, ability to cope, goal attainment, and sense of control and significantly negatively correlated with anxiety intensity and self-handicapping; and (3) the path idea acted as a partial negative mediator between positive emotion and anxiety intensity, and the sense of control played a partial negative mediator between the emotive force idea and self-handicapping.Conclusion(1) Players’ positive emotions can predict the sense of hope. It also tends to interpret the anxiety intensity as a positive challenge rather than a negative sense of control. (2) Players with a higher path idea also tend to have lower negative emotion, anxiety intensity, and self-handicapping; (3) martial arts players’ path idea has a significantly higher predictive power for the sense of control than the emotive force idea. Still, both path and emotive force ideas can indirectly affect the intensity of anxiety orientation and self-handicapping through the multiple mediators of sense of control. Finally, recommendations for coaches related to training and preparation for competition are discussed.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01460/fullmartial artspositive emotionsports hopepath force ideasemotive force ideasprecompetition state anxiety
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author HuiXin Yang
XuPing Wen
Fei Xu
spellingShingle HuiXin Yang
XuPing Wen
Fei Xu
The Influence of Positive Emotion and Sports Hope on Pre-competition State Anxiety in Martial Arts Players
Frontiers in Psychology
martial arts
positive emotion
sports hope
path force ideas
emotive force ideas
precompetition state anxiety
author_facet HuiXin Yang
XuPing Wen
Fei Xu
author_sort HuiXin Yang
title The Influence of Positive Emotion and Sports Hope on Pre-competition State Anxiety in Martial Arts Players
title_short The Influence of Positive Emotion and Sports Hope on Pre-competition State Anxiety in Martial Arts Players
title_full The Influence of Positive Emotion and Sports Hope on Pre-competition State Anxiety in Martial Arts Players
title_fullStr The Influence of Positive Emotion and Sports Hope on Pre-competition State Anxiety in Martial Arts Players
title_full_unstemmed The Influence of Positive Emotion and Sports Hope on Pre-competition State Anxiety in Martial Arts Players
title_sort influence of positive emotion and sports hope on pre-competition state anxiety in martial arts players
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2020-07-01
description ObjectivesThe present study proposes a model for the relationships among competitive martial arts players’ positive emotions, hope (path and emotive force ideas), sense of control, self-handicapping, and precompetition state anxiety (PCSA). The model seeks to advance our understanding around the causal and mediating effects between these variables and, thus, has important implications for theory and practice in the field of sports and exercise psychology.MethodA total of 327 participants (male: 255, female: 72; age: 21.45 ± 2.78 years; athletic training: 6.27 ± 2.54 years) in the China University Wushu Sanda Championship 2019 were surveyed. Within 2 h before the match, PCSA, sports hope, sense of control, anxiety, and self-handicapping were measured.ResultsThe findings of the present study showed that (1) positive emotions have a significant positive correlation with path and emotive force ideas, anxiety orientation, ability to cope, goal attainment, and sense of control; (2) path and emotive force ideas were significantly positively correlated with anxiety orientation, ability to cope, goal attainment, and sense of control and significantly negatively correlated with anxiety intensity and self-handicapping; and (3) the path idea acted as a partial negative mediator between positive emotion and anxiety intensity, and the sense of control played a partial negative mediator between the emotive force idea and self-handicapping.Conclusion(1) Players’ positive emotions can predict the sense of hope. It also tends to interpret the anxiety intensity as a positive challenge rather than a negative sense of control. (2) Players with a higher path idea also tend to have lower negative emotion, anxiety intensity, and self-handicapping; (3) martial arts players’ path idea has a significantly higher predictive power for the sense of control than the emotive force idea. Still, both path and emotive force ideas can indirectly affect the intensity of anxiety orientation and self-handicapping through the multiple mediators of sense of control. Finally, recommendations for coaches related to training and preparation for competition are discussed.
topic martial arts
positive emotion
sports hope
path force ideas
emotive force ideas
precompetition state anxiety
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01460/full
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