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      Precompetitive state anxiety, objective and subjective performance, and causal attributions in competitive swimmers.

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          Abstract

          This study investigated the nature of the relationship between precompetitive state anxiety (CSAI-2C), subjective (race position) and objective (satisfaction) performance outcomes, and self-rated causal attributions (CDS-IIC) for performance in competitive child swimmers. Race position, subjective satisfaction, self-confidence, and, to a lesser extent, cognitive state anxiety (but not somatic state anxiety) were associated with the attributions provided by the children for their swimming performance. The study partially supported the self-serving bias hypothesis; winners used the ego-enhancing attributional strategy, but the losers did not use an ego-protecting attributional style. Age but not gender appeared to influence the attributions provided in achievement situations.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Pediatr Exerc Sci
          Pediatric exercise science
          Human Kinetics
          0899-8493
          0899-8493
          Feb 2007
          : 19
          : 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Dept of Sport, Health & Exercise Science, The University of Hull, UK.
          Article
          10.1123/pes.19.1.39
          17554156
          76e5bcfc-1b0e-4538-92b2-aa28df1bd611
          History

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