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Exploring proportions of spontaneous and goal-directed self-talk – It is not always the one or the other.

Authors :
Fritsch, Julian
Nonnenmann, Jannis
Engelmann, Nadine
Latinjak, Alexander T.
Hatzigeorgiadis, Antonis
Jekauc, Darko
Source :
Psychology of Sport & Exercise. Nov2024, Vol. 75, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The dichotomous classification of self-talk statements into goal-directed as a more controlled type of self-talk and spontaneous as a more uncontrolled type of self-talk might be an oversimplification. To address this issue, two studies were conducted aiming to explore the idea that the distinction between the two self-talk types should rather be proportional and not mutually exclusive. In Study 1, football players took part in a penalty competition and were subsequently asked to state the self-talk they had before and after the penalty. In Study 2, table tennis players took part in two activities (i.e., a precision task and a competitive set) and were subsequently asked to state the self-talk they had before the individual rounds in each activity. In both studies, the players subsequently rated for each self-talk statement the extent to which it was spontaneous and the extent to which it was goal-directed. The majority of self-talk statements were rated to some extent as both spontaneous and goal-directed. For Study 1, paired-sample t-tests showed that before a penalty kick self-talk was more goal-directed than spontaneous and after the penalty kick it was more spontaneous than goal-directed. In the more exploratory Study 2, multilevel regression analyses showed that the two types of self-talk could not predict sports performance. While the results support the usefulness of the distinction between spontaneous and goal-directed self-talk, treating the two types of self-talk as proportional rather than dichotomous might reflect more accurately the mental activity. Key words: dual-process, organic self-talk, self-regulation, System 1, System 2 • Use of a proportional classification of spontaneous and goal-directed self-talk. • Before a penalty, players reported higher extent of goal-directed self-talk. • After a penalty, players reported higher extent of spontaneous self-talk. • Self-talk did not predict performance in two activities in table tennis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14690292
Volume :
75
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Psychology of Sport & Exercise
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179602184
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychsport.2024.102704