A Phenomenological Investigation of Gymnasts’ Lived Experience of Imagery

Imagery is a mental skill that has been researched extensively over the last 40 years (Weinberg, 2008). Experimental and applied investigations have demonstrated that imagery positively affects sport performance as well as a number of psychological characteristics of athletes (Feltz & Landers, 1...

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Main Author: Post, Phillip G
Format: Others
Published: Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/739
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spelling ndltd-UTENN-oai-trace.tennessee.edu-utk_graddiss-17502011-12-13T16:03:32Z A Phenomenological Investigation of Gymnasts’ Lived Experience of Imagery Post, Phillip G Imagery is a mental skill that has been researched extensively over the last 40 years (Weinberg, 2008). Experimental and applied investigations have demonstrated that imagery positively affects sport performance as well as a number of psychological characteristics of athletes (Feltz & Landers, 1983; Morris, Spittle, & Watt, 2005). Studies have also revealed that athletes use imagery for multiple functions (both cognitive and motivational) in a variety of sports (both open and closed) and in and out of competition (Hall, Mack, Paivio, & Hausenblas, 1998; Munroe, Giaccobbi, Hall, & Weinberg, 2000). Prior to the present study, however, research had not examined athletes’ experience of imagery in depth. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to explore athletes’ lived experience of using imagery in their sport. To accomplish this goal phenomenological interviews were conducted with ten female collegiate gymnasts (M age = 22.2 yr). After a brief period of introductory conversation each participant was asked to respond to the following open-ended statement: “Think of a time when you have used imagery in your sport and describe that to me as fully as possible.” Follow-up questions were asked only to gain further clarification or to obtain additional details to gymnasts’ comments. All interviews were audio recorded and transcribed verbatim. Qualitative analysis of the transcripts revealed a total of 693 meaning units, which were then grouped into sub-themes and major themes. A final thematic structure revealed five major dimensions that characterized these gymnasts’ experience of using imagery: preparing for movement, mentally preparing, feeling the skill, controlling perspective/speed/effort, and time and place. The most significant findings of the present study were that these gymnasts (a) varied the speed of their imagery (real and slow time), (b) used imagery during a performance bout as well as in preparation for performance, (c) combined physical motion with their imagery to increase the feel of the skill, and (d) felt a persistent need to make their imagery perfect. These results extend the findings of previous imagery research and offer several implications for coaches and practitioners interested in using imagery with gymnasts. 2010-05-01 text application/pdf http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/739 Doctoral Dissertations Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange Imagery Gymnastics Phenomenology Kinesiology Psychology of Movement
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Imagery
Gymnastics
Phenomenology
Kinesiology
Psychology of Movement
spellingShingle Imagery
Gymnastics
Phenomenology
Kinesiology
Psychology of Movement
Post, Phillip G
A Phenomenological Investigation of Gymnasts’ Lived Experience of Imagery
description Imagery is a mental skill that has been researched extensively over the last 40 years (Weinberg, 2008). Experimental and applied investigations have demonstrated that imagery positively affects sport performance as well as a number of psychological characteristics of athletes (Feltz & Landers, 1983; Morris, Spittle, & Watt, 2005). Studies have also revealed that athletes use imagery for multiple functions (both cognitive and motivational) in a variety of sports (both open and closed) and in and out of competition (Hall, Mack, Paivio, & Hausenblas, 1998; Munroe, Giaccobbi, Hall, & Weinberg, 2000). Prior to the present study, however, research had not examined athletes’ experience of imagery in depth. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to explore athletes’ lived experience of using imagery in their sport. To accomplish this goal phenomenological interviews were conducted with ten female collegiate gymnasts (M age = 22.2 yr). After a brief period of introductory conversation each participant was asked to respond to the following open-ended statement: “Think of a time when you have used imagery in your sport and describe that to me as fully as possible.” Follow-up questions were asked only to gain further clarification or to obtain additional details to gymnasts’ comments. All interviews were audio recorded and transcribed verbatim. Qualitative analysis of the transcripts revealed a total of 693 meaning units, which were then grouped into sub-themes and major themes. A final thematic structure revealed five major dimensions that characterized these gymnasts’ experience of using imagery: preparing for movement, mentally preparing, feeling the skill, controlling perspective/speed/effort, and time and place. The most significant findings of the present study were that these gymnasts (a) varied the speed of their imagery (real and slow time), (b) used imagery during a performance bout as well as in preparation for performance, (c) combined physical motion with their imagery to increase the feel of the skill, and (d) felt a persistent need to make their imagery perfect. These results extend the findings of previous imagery research and offer several implications for coaches and practitioners interested in using imagery with gymnasts.
author Post, Phillip G
author_facet Post, Phillip G
author_sort Post, Phillip G
title A Phenomenological Investigation of Gymnasts’ Lived Experience of Imagery
title_short A Phenomenological Investigation of Gymnasts’ Lived Experience of Imagery
title_full A Phenomenological Investigation of Gymnasts’ Lived Experience of Imagery
title_fullStr A Phenomenological Investigation of Gymnasts’ Lived Experience of Imagery
title_full_unstemmed A Phenomenological Investigation of Gymnasts’ Lived Experience of Imagery
title_sort phenomenological investigation of gymnasts’ lived experience of imagery
publisher Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange
publishDate 2010
url http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/739
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