Meyers A W, Whelan J P, Murphy S M
Department of Psychology, Memphis State University, USA.
Prog Behav Modif. 1996;30:137-64.
While we might debate the role of sport in our culture, its influence is certainly pervasive. Each day millions of Americans engage in some form of competition, training, or physical exercise. Such popularity and the value our culture places on competition have made sport a valid area of psychological inquiry. Within the cognitive behavioral model, sport psychology and, specifically, athletic performance enhancement have experienced vigorous growth over the past two decades. Behavior change strategies familiar to most cognitive behaviorists form the core of virtually all athletic performance enhancement interventions. Goal setting, imagery or mental rehearsal, relaxation training, stress management, self-monitoring, self-instruction, cognitive restructuring, and modeling interventions dominate this literature. Our examination of these performance enhancement programs, both through a qualitative review and the Whelan et al. (1989) meta-analysis, supports the efficacy of cognitive behavioral interventions for the enhancement of sport performance. First, the average effect size across the empirical literature indicates that these interventions are reliably effective. Furthermore, this positive result is observed across variations in treatment conditions, control conditions, and across different types of dependent measures. Evidence on goal setting, imagery, arousal management, cognitive self-regulation, and packaged programs specifically support the behavior change efficacy of these interventions. These findings are encouraging, but much work needs to be done. Few investigators cited in this review attend to crucial internal and external validity issues. Attention to treatment integrity, including training of behavior change agents, verification of intervention implementation, and verification of reception of the treatment, is sorely lacking. Psychological skill development and its relationship to performance improvements are rarely checked. Now that cognitive behavioral interventions appear to be reliably effective at posttreatment, we must have meaningful evaluation of maintenance of psychological skill and performance changes. Six-month, 12-month, and longer follow-up evaluations are necessary. We must also begin more detailed evaluations of these effective interventions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
虽然我们可能会争论体育在我们文化中的作用,但其影响无疑是普遍存在的。每天都有数百万美国人参与某种形式的竞赛、训练或体育锻炼。这种受欢迎程度以及我们的文化对竞争的重视,使体育成为心理学研究的一个有效领域。在认知行为模型中,运动心理学,尤其是运动成绩提升,在过去二十年中经历了蓬勃发展。大多数认知行为学家熟悉的行为改变策略构成了几乎所有运动成绩提升干预措施的核心。目标设定、意象或心理演练、放松训练、压力管理、自我监测、自我指导、认知重构和榜样干预在这一文献中占据主导地位。我们通过定性综述以及惠兰等人(1989年)的元分析对这些成绩提升项目进行的研究,支持了认知行为干预对提高运动成绩的有效性。首先,实证文献中的平均效应量表明这些干预措施确实有效。此外,在不同的治疗条件、对照条件以及不同类型的因变量测量中都观察到了这一积极结果。关于目标设定、意象、唤醒管理、认知自我调节和综合项目的证据特别支持了这些干预措施的行为改变效果。这些发现令人鼓舞,但仍有许多工作要做。本综述中引用的研究很少关注关键的内部和外部效度问题。严重缺乏对治疗完整性的关注,包括行为改变实施者的培训、干预实施的核实以及治疗接受情况的核实。心理技能发展及其与成绩提高的关系很少得到检验。既然认知行为干预在治疗后似乎确实有效,我们就必须对心理技能和成绩变化的维持进行有意义的评估。六个月、十二个月及更长时间的随访评估是必要的。我们还必须开始对这些有效干预措施进行更详细的评估。(摘要截选至400字)