Arousal and anxiety (wk3) Flashcards
Define arousal and anxiety
-Arousal -> A state of activation that varies on a continuum from deep sleep to intense excitement
-Anxiety -> Negative emotional state with feelings of nervousness and worry associated with activation or arousal of the body. Anxiety and arousal are often intertwined. In a sport setting, anxiety refers to ‘an unpleasant psychological state in reaction to perceived stress concerning the performance of a task under pressure’ (Cheng et al., 2009)
Describe trait, state and trait+state anxiety
- Trait anxiety -> General feeling of anxiety across situations. Also called ‘A-trait’. Personality characteristic.
- State anxiety -> Situational feelings of apprehension or tension. Also called ‘A-state’. Temporary. Situation specific.
- Trait + state anxiety -> High trait anxiety is associated with high state anxiety. Both have cognitive and somatic components. They are inter-related (don’t isolate them from each other)
-All athletes experience arousal and most will experience anxiety
Describe cognitive, somatic and cognitive+somatic anxiety
c-Anxiety components -> Anxiety is multi-dimensional. Can be classified into 2 types: cognitive and somatic anxiety:
* Cognitive anxiety -> The mental component of anxiety. Worry, negative thoughts, feelings of nervousness and apprehension.
* Somatic anxiety -> Perception of physical state – happens externally. Increased respiration, increased sweating, increased HR, physical nervousness (e.g. shaking, tense muscles). Not always accompanied by actual physiological changes (or changes as intense is perceived).
* Cognitive + somatic anxiety -> Individuals can experience both types of anxiety but often to different extents. This often varies between people and over time E.g. cognitive maybe more prevalent ahead of time vs somatic on the day
Measuring anxiety with strengths and weaknesses
-Direct measurements via physiological measurements
- Directly measured via physiological measurements. Change in HR, respiration, skin conductance, cortisol (through a HR monitor and/or watch)
+ = Direct comparisons, quantifiable results
-= Expensive, requires training, may not reflect anxiety
Measuring anxiety with strengths and weaknesses
-Self-report questionnaires
- Self-report questionnaires – Global questionnaire i.e. low to high anxiety. Competitive State Anxiety Inventory Questionnaire – 27 items (3 subscales: cognitive and somatic anxiety and self-confidence)
+ = Cheap, no training, easy
-= Response bias/ socially desirable responding, difficult to compare to other scores, not always able to explain how we feel, response scale can be limiting
Measuring anxiety with strengths and weaknesses
-Multidimensional measures
- Multidimensional measures – Break anxiety down into cognitive and somatic. Differently experienced. Cognitive and somatic anxiety can be scored differently.
- Can be more trait and state specific
Describe anxiety intensity and direction
-Anxiety intensity and direction -> Intensity: How much anxiety one feels. Direction -> One’s interpretation of anxiety as being facilitative or debilitative to performance. Interpretation of anxiety symptoms is important – facilitative interpretations leads to better performance.
Theories of arousal
-Drive theory
- As arousal increases, the likelihood dominant response will occur
- Effects of arousal on performance depends on skill level
- Performance= Habit (skill level) x Drive (arousal)
- High arousal levels = Dominant response
- Skilled performer
- In advanced stages of learning, skill execution is usually correct
- High arousal improves performance
- Unskilled performer
- In early stages of learning, skill is usually incorrect
- High arousal impairs performance
Theories of arousal
-Inverted U theory
- Increased arousal improves performance up to a certain point
- Further arousal impairs performance
- Optimal arousal differs from person to person
Theories of arousal
-Individual zones of optimal functioning
- Each athlete has a zone of optimal anxiety in which they perform best
- Optimal level so not a single point but bandwidth
- Zone anxiety different to other emotions
Theories of arousal
-Multidimensional anxiety theory
- Distinguishes between cognitive and somatic anxiety
Theories of arousal
-Catastrophe theory
- One disruption happens, athletes have to regain control of arousal
Outline/draw the control model of anxiety
Why arousal influences performance
-Muscle tension and coordination difficulties, attention and concentration changes
Muscle tension and coordination difficulties – High state anxiety. Muscle soreness, aches and pains. Interfere with coordination. Use more muscular energy measured by ECG.
Attention and concentration change – Narrowing of attention, shift to dominant style, attend inappropriate cues.
-Attention and concentration changes -> Some anxiety is good as it focuses on the task at hand which can improve performance. Too much anxiety is bad as it reduces the amount of attentional resources devoted to the task.
Weaknesses of each theory
-Drive theory
- = Too simplistic - predictions fall short.
- = Cannot explain why some elite athletes choke under pressure
- = Cannot explain why some athletes excel under pressure