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Functional impact of emotions on athletic performance: Comparing the IZOF model and the directional perception approach

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Pages 1033-1047 | Accepted 03 Mar 2008, Published online: 17 Jul 2008
 

Abstract

The aim of this study was to examine the impact of emotions on athletic performance within the frameworks of the Individual Zones of Optimal Functioning (IZOF) model and the directional perception approach. Intensity, functional impact, and hedonic tone of trait and state anxiety, self-confidence, idiosyncratic emotions, and bodily symptoms were assessed in high-level Italian swimmers and track and field athletes (N = 56). Three standards of performance (poor, average, and good), derived from retrospective self-ratings across one to three competitions (a total of 90 observations), were used as independent variables in the analysis of variance of intensity, intra-individual, and direction scores of anxiety, self-confidence, idiosyncratic emotions, and bodily symptoms. Subsequently, intra-individual scores were categorized as near to or distant from optimal/dysfunctional zones and entered as the independent variable in the analysis of direction scores. The results provided support for the predictions stemming from both the IZOF model and the directional approach, as well as help in interpreting direction of anxiety and other idiosyncratic emotions within the IZOF framework. Athletes tended to perceive emotional levels approximating an individual's optimal zone as facilitative–pleasant, and emotional levels approximating an individual's dysfunctional zone as debilitative–unpleasant.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to express their gratitude to two anonymous reviewers for their constructive and insightful comments on a previous draft of the manuscript.

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