Imagery use gender differences across competition and training contexts in Australian elite level athletes

Author:

Lovell Geoff P.1ORCID,Bierton James2,Gorman Adam D.23,Lloyd Michael45,Gorman Alexandra67,Parker John K.8

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology , University of Worcester , Worcester , Worcestershire , UK

2. School of Health , University of the Sunshine Coast , Maroochydore , Queensland , Australia

3. School of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences , Queensland University of Technology , Brisbane , Queensland , Australia

4. National Tennis Academy , Tennis Australia , Tennyson , Queensland , Australia

5. National Cricket Centre , Cricket Australia , Albion , Queensland , Australia

6. Queensland Cricket , Albion , Queensland , Australia

7. Queensland Academy of Sport, Department of Tourism, Innovation and Sport, QSAC , Brisbane , Queensland , Australia

8. Department of Sport , Hartpury University , Gloucester , Gloucestershire , UK

Abstract

Abstract Objectives To identify which functions of imagery are most frequently used by elite athletes, whether imagery usage differs between training and competing contexts, if imagery use differs between genders, and whether any gender differences in imagery use interacts with training and competition contexts. Methods 62 elite male and female cricketers and Australian Football League players participants completed the Sports Imagery Questionnaire in both training and competition contexts. Results Motivational general-mastery imagery (MG-M) imagery was significantly the most frequently used imagery function, with male athletes reporting using imagery significantly more frequently than female athletes. Furthermore, a significant gender by context interaction demonstrated that the male athletes used imagery significantly more frequently before competing compared to before training, whilst conversely the female athletes used imagery significantly more frequently prior to training compared to competition. Conclusions Future research should further explore the potential benefits of imagery in female athletic populations by using imagery interventions that are sufficiently bespoke for the needs of female athletes.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

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