Arousal, stress, and anxiety Flashcards

1
Q

What is arousal?

A

A state of activation that varies on a continuum from deep sleep to intense excitement

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2
Q

Is arousal good or bad?

A

Arousal is neither positive or negative - depends on situation. E.g. can experience high arousal when winning a game, and when you’re in a car crash

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3
Q

What is anxiety?

A

Negative emotional state with feelings of nervousness and worry, associated with activation or arousal of the body

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4
Q

What are the four types of anxiety?

A

Cognitive, somatic, trait, and state

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5
Q

What is cognitive anxiety?

A

What we think

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6
Q

What is somatic anxiety?

A

What we feel. E.g. elevated heart rate, sweating, butterflies, shaking. Typically due to release of adrenaline

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7
Q

What is trait anxiety?

A

Personality characteristic; general tendency to perceive situations as anxiety-provoking; can be somatic and cognitive; typically those who suffer from trait anxiety will have high state anxiety too

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8
Q

What is state anxiety?

A

Transient, situation-specific feelings of worry and tension; often relate to importance or difficulty; cognitive state is degree to which one worries or has negative thoughts; somatic state is moment-to-moment changes in perceived physiological activation

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9
Q

How is anxiety recorded?

A

Measure physiological indicators, or self-reports

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10
Q

What are physiological indicators of anxiety, and how they are measured?

A

Less theta waves and more beta waves, measured by EEG; increased heart rate, measured by EKG; increased muscle tension, measured by EMG; increased respiration and decreased tidal volume; increased blood pressure; increased sweating and decreased skin resistance; increased adrenaline and noradrenaline

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11
Q

What are advantages of measuring physiological indicators?

A

Is objective and unbiased; can provide helpful information to athletes and coaches; can help demonstrate effectiveness of interventions

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12
Q

Why are physiological indicators rarely used to measure anxiety?

A

Is very time consuming and inconvenient; is very expensive; results take a long time and highly trained technicians to interpret; athletes differ in their responses; athletes differ in their interpretation of anxiety

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13
Q

What are types of self-report measures?

A

Global measures, e.g. rating how anxious you feel; multidimensional measures, e.g. rate how worried and activated you feel, can measure both state and trait; competitive state anxiety inventory-2, measures state cognitive and somatic, and self-confidence, 27 items sub-divided into 3 subscales and on a 1-4 scale, e.g. I feel nervous/I am concerned about losing/ I feel self-confident

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14
Q

What are disadvantages of self-report?

A

Subject to social desirability; inability to articulate thoughts/ feelings; limiting response scales

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15
Q

What is anxiety intensity?

A

How much anxiety one feels

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16
Q

What is anxiety direction?

A

One’s interpretation of anxiety as being facilitative or debilitative to performance. Interpreting as facilitative leads to superior performance

17
Q

How is faciliative and debilitative anxiety measured?

A

Modified version of CSAI-2: intensity and direction questioned

18
Q

How does anxiety change over time?

A

Increases closer to competition; dramatic increase at 2 hours before and further increase at 30 minutes before

19
Q

How does anxiety differ between elite and non-elite athletes?

A

Intensity very similar between somatic and cognitive for elite and non-elite, likely die to frame of reference as it is situational; elite view as facilitative, whilst non-elite view as debilitative

20
Q

What is stress?

A

A substantial imbalance between demand and response capability, under conditions where failure has important consequence