Lee's Facebook Page Lee's Twitter Page Lee's Quora Page Lee's YouTube PlaylistLee's Linkedin Page
 Follow Us on Social Media

Thursday, August 28, 2025
 

Tour Golf News
Junior Golf News
Book A Teetime
Golf Course Listing
Swing Analysis
Golf Research Archive
 
 
Displaying result for your search
TitleCausal attribution and emotion in the days following competition.
Author(s)Allen MS, Jones MV, Sheffield D.
ID#19191165
AbstractWe examined the extent to which attributions are consistent in the days following competition and how attributions made immediately after competition may influence the temporal patterning of emotions experienced in response to competition. A sample of 60 adult female golfers completed measures of performance satisfaction, causal attribution, and emotion immediately after competition, 5 h after competition, and 2 days after competition. Repeated-measures multivariate analysis of covariance indicated that attributions did not change over this period. Emotions showed a significant decrease in intensity over the 5-h post-competition period. Regression analyses indicated that changes in anger and dejection were more likely in the case of less successful performances. For anger, attributions moderated this level of change. Golfers experienced anger for a longer period when they identified the cause of poor performance as stable rather than unstable. Thus, in the present sample although attributions did not change over 2 days, the longevity of anger depended on the attributions made immediately after competition.
Publisher Linkhttp://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/02640410802538754?url_ver=Z39.88-2003&rfr_id=ori:rid:crossref.org&rfr_dat=cr_
Full Text LinkNot_Available
Search Box

Site Partners
red square


 
 
 
 
 
Copyright ©2011 International Golf Marketing Group - All Rights Reserved