Cormier Danielle L, Ferguson Leah J, Gyurcsik Nancy C, Briere Jennifer L, Mosewich Amber D, Kowalski Kent C
College of Kinesiology, University of Saskatchewan, Canada.
College of Kinesiology, University of Saskatchewan, Canada.
Psychol Sport Exerc. 2024 Jan;70:102540. doi: 10.1016/j.psychsport.2023.102540. Epub 2023 Sep 28.
In high-performance sport, an athlete's ability to overcome setbacks and sustain their pursuit of long-term goals is essential for success. Grit (i.e., passion and perseverance over long-terms) has been linked to success in a variety of domains but is often critiqued for its limited predictive utility when compared to other psychological variables including self-control, conscientiousness, and mental toughness. The purpose of this study was to examine whether grit predicted important athlete outcomes (i.e., various measures of sport performance and athlete well-being) beyond other determinants of success. Data from 214 collegiate student-athletes (111 women, 103 men; M = 21.02, SD = 2.26) from Western Canadian universities were analysed. When predicting performance, the addition of the grit subscales (i.e., consistency of interests, perseverance of effort, adaptability to situations) explained an additional 11% of variance (R = 0.37, F[7, 203] = 7.16, p < .001) beyond self-control, conscientiousness, and mental toughness in subjective sport performance perceptions; however, grit did not add unique variance when entered into models predicting athlete goal achievement perceptions or highest level of competition. When predicting well-being, addition of the grit subscales added 18% of unique variance (R = 0.43, F[7, 203] = 21.43, p < .001) beyond other determinants of success in eudaimonic well-being, and 5% (R = 0.17, F[7, 203] = 6.95, p < .001) in satisfaction with sport, but did not add any unique variance to the model predicting mood. The partial support of the predictive utility of grit illustrates the complexity of forecasting success in sport and offers evidence that grit should continue to be studied as a motivational disposition in the domain of sport.
在高性能运动中,运动员克服挫折并持续追求长期目标的能力对成功至关重要。坚毅(即长期的热情和毅力)已被证明与各个领域的成功相关,但与包括自我控制、尽责性和心理韧性在内的其他心理变量相比,其预测效用往往受到质疑。本研究旨在探讨坚毅是否能在其他成功决定因素之外,预测运动员的重要成果(即运动表现和运动员幸福感的各种衡量指标)。分析了来自加拿大西部大学的214名大学生运动员(111名女性,103名男性;M = 21.02,SD = 2.26)的数据。在预测表现时,加入坚毅分量表(即兴趣的一致性、努力的坚持性、对情况的适应性)在主观运动表现认知中,除了自我控制、尽责性和心理韧性之外,还额外解释了11%的方差(R = 0.37,F[7, 203] = 7.16,p <.001);然而,在预测运动员目标达成认知或最高比赛水平的模型中,坚毅并未增加独特的方差。在预测幸福感时,加入坚毅分量表在超越其他成功决定因素的情况下,在幸福安康幸福感中额外增加了18%的独特方差(R = 0.43,F[7, 203] = 21.43,p <.001),在对运动的满意度中增加了5%(R = 0.17,F[7, 203] = 6.95,p <.001),但在预测情绪的模型中未增加任何独特方差。对坚毅预测效用的部分支持说明了预测运动成功的复杂性,并提供了证据表明坚毅应继续作为运动领域中的一种动机倾向进行研究。