The Relationship Among Personality, Cognitive Anxiety, Somatic Anxiety, Physiological Arousal, and Performance in Male Athletes
Citation
YERLİKAYA, Kamuran Balyan, Serdar TOK, Arkun TATAR, Erdal BİNBOĞA & Melih BALYAN. "The Relationship Among Personality, Cognitive Anxiety, Somatic Anxiety, Physiological Arousal, and Performance in Male Athletes". Journal of Clinical Sport Psychology, 10.1 (2016): 48-58.Abstract
The present study examined the association between personality, competitive anxiety,
somatic anxiety and physiological arousal in athletes with high and low anxiety levels.
Anxiety was manipulated by means of an incentive. Fifty male participants, first,
completed the Five Factor Personality Inventory and their resting electro dermal activity (EDA) was recorded. In the second stage, participants were randomly assigned
to high or low anxiety groups. Individual EDAs were recorded again to determine
precompetition physiological arousal. Participants also completed the Competitive State Anxiety Inventory-2 (CSAI-2) and played a computer-simulated soccer
match. Results showed that neuroticism was related to both CSAI-2 components and
physiological arousal only in the group receiving the incentive. Winners had higher
levels of cognitive anxiety and lower levels of physiological arousal than losers. On
the basis of these findings, we concluded that an athlete’s neurotic personality may
influence his cognitive and physiological responses in a competition.