Authors
Andrew M Lane, Chris J Beedie, Marc V Jones, Mark Uphill, Tracey J Devonport
Publication date
2012/7/1
Journal
Journal of sports sciences
Volume
30
Issue
11
Pages
1189-1195
Publisher
Routledge
Description
Emotions experienced before and during sports competition have been found to influence sports performance. Emotion regulation is defined as the automatic or deliberate use of strategies to initiate, maintain, modify or display emotions (Gross & Thompson, 2007) and is proposed to occur when a discrepancy exists between current and desired emotions. Two distinct motivations to regulate emotion – hedonic and instrumental (in short, for pleasure or for purpose) – have been proposed (Tamir, 2009). The instrumental approach might provide a more fruitful area of investigation for sports researchers as some athletes hold beliefs that supposedly pleasant emotions such as happiness and calmness associate with poor performance and supposedly unpleasant emotions such as anxiety and anger associate with good performance (Hanin, 2010). Athletes are more likely to try to regulate an emotion if they believe that …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AM Lane, CJ Beedie, MV Jones, M Uphill… - Journal of sports sciences, 2012