Gucciardi Daniel F
School of Physiotherapy and Exercise Science, Curtin University, Perth, WA, Australia.
Prog Brain Res. 2017;232:127-132. doi: 10.1016/bs.pbr.2016.11.006. Epub 2017 Jan 28.
In the target article, Hardy and colleagues provided an incisive analysis of retrospectively reported psychosocial factors associated with the development and careers of 32 former athletes from Olympic sports. They found that Super-Elite athletes ("serial" medal winners at major international championships, i.e., World Championship or Olympic Games) differed from matched Elite performers (won medals at international competitions but not major championships) with regard to several important psychosocial factors (e.g., negative life events, turning point, relative importance of sport). In this commentary, I critique and extend upon these key findings to delineate additional considerations for understanding the whole person (i.e., traits, characteristic adaptations, narrative identity) and salience of adversity (i.e., timing, frequency, and duration) with the goal to stimulate future research and theory on the psychosocial development of Olympic champions.
在目标文章中,哈迪及其同事对32名来自奥林匹克项目的前运动员的发展和职业生涯所涉及的回顾性报告的心理社会因素进行了深刻分析。他们发现,超级精英运动员(在重大国际锦标赛,即世界锦标赛或奥运会上多次获得奖牌者)在几个重要的心理社会因素方面(如负面生活事件、转折点、运动的相对重要性)与相匹配的精英运动员(在国际比赛中获奖但未在重大锦标赛中获奖)有所不同。在这篇评论中,我对这些关键发现进行批评并加以扩展,以阐明理解整个人(即特质、特征适应性、叙事身份)和逆境的显著性(即时机、频率和持续时间)的其他考虑因素,目标是激发关于奥运冠军心理社会发展的未来研究和理论。