Taking Action or Thinking About It? State Orientation and Rumination Are Correlated in Athletes

Athletic performance in competitive sports relies heavily on the ability to cope effectively with stressful situations. In contrast, some athletes report that their thoughts revolve around the future or past and not around the actual demands during competitions. In those specific stressful situation...

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Main Authors: Alena Kröhler, Stefan Berti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00576/full
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spelling doaj-cec66d8b0893489e88a242e34bdd52392020-11-25T02:10:37ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782019-03-011010.3389/fpsyg.2019.00576429232Taking Action or Thinking About It? State Orientation and Rumination Are Correlated in AthletesAlena KröhlerStefan BertiAthletic performance in competitive sports relies heavily on the ability to cope effectively with stressful situations. In contrast, some athletes report that their thoughts revolve around the future or past and not around the actual demands during competitions. In those specific stressful situations, the lack of focus like an unintended fixation on repetitive cognitions can have fatal consequences with regard to the performance. Especially when competitors are close in their athletic capabilities, differences in effectively coping with stress and mental stability may decide about winning and losing. One established factor of performing effectively under pressure is the individual tendency to either focus on taking action (i.e., action orientation) or on focusing on the own emotions (i.e., state orientation). It is widely acknowledged that state-oriented athletes have disadvantages in performing under stress. Moreover, the action control theory claims that state orientation is related to ruminative cognitions, which itself is assumed to impair performance in the long term. We tested this hypothesis in 157 competitive athletes from different sports (including individual and team sports). Regression analysis demonstrates a substantial correlation of failure-related action orientation (i.e., state orientation) with different measures of rumination (including general, clinically relevant, and competition-related rumination). In addition, general (i.e., content independent) rumination also correlated substantially with a rumination scale adapted specifically to sports-related competition. These results suggest (1) that a sports and competition-related ruminative mechanism exists and (2) that ruminative cognitions are related to the cognitive basis of state orientation. While our study does not allow for a causal interpretation, it provides an additional approach to investigate mental factors underlying inter-individual differences in athletic performance under stress and pressure.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00576/fullruminationaction control theorystate orientationaction orientationfailure-related behavioral adaptationcompetitive sports
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alena Kröhler
Stefan Berti
spellingShingle Alena Kröhler
Stefan Berti
Taking Action or Thinking About It? State Orientation and Rumination Are Correlated in Athletes
Frontiers in Psychology
rumination
action control theory
state orientation
action orientation
failure-related behavioral adaptation
competitive sports
author_facet Alena Kröhler
Stefan Berti
author_sort Alena Kröhler
title Taking Action or Thinking About It? State Orientation and Rumination Are Correlated in Athletes
title_short Taking Action or Thinking About It? State Orientation and Rumination Are Correlated in Athletes
title_full Taking Action or Thinking About It? State Orientation and Rumination Are Correlated in Athletes
title_fullStr Taking Action or Thinking About It? State Orientation and Rumination Are Correlated in Athletes
title_full_unstemmed Taking Action or Thinking About It? State Orientation and Rumination Are Correlated in Athletes
title_sort taking action or thinking about it? state orientation and rumination are correlated in athletes
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Athletic performance in competitive sports relies heavily on the ability to cope effectively with stressful situations. In contrast, some athletes report that their thoughts revolve around the future or past and not around the actual demands during competitions. In those specific stressful situations, the lack of focus like an unintended fixation on repetitive cognitions can have fatal consequences with regard to the performance. Especially when competitors are close in their athletic capabilities, differences in effectively coping with stress and mental stability may decide about winning and losing. One established factor of performing effectively under pressure is the individual tendency to either focus on taking action (i.e., action orientation) or on focusing on the own emotions (i.e., state orientation). It is widely acknowledged that state-oriented athletes have disadvantages in performing under stress. Moreover, the action control theory claims that state orientation is related to ruminative cognitions, which itself is assumed to impair performance in the long term. We tested this hypothesis in 157 competitive athletes from different sports (including individual and team sports). Regression analysis demonstrates a substantial correlation of failure-related action orientation (i.e., state orientation) with different measures of rumination (including general, clinically relevant, and competition-related rumination). In addition, general (i.e., content independent) rumination also correlated substantially with a rumination scale adapted specifically to sports-related competition. These results suggest (1) that a sports and competition-related ruminative mechanism exists and (2) that ruminative cognitions are related to the cognitive basis of state orientation. While our study does not allow for a causal interpretation, it provides an additional approach to investigate mental factors underlying inter-individual differences in athletic performance under stress and pressure.
topic rumination
action control theory
state orientation
action orientation
failure-related behavioral adaptation
competitive sports
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00576/full
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