TO OUR READERS: An error appeared in the ahead-of-print version of the following article: Fozzard, T. & Mojtahedi, D. (2023). Personality and attitudinal predictors of sportspersonship in recreational sport. Journal of Clinical Sport Psychology. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10
Search Results
Erratum. Personality and Attitudinal Predictors of Sportspersonship in Recreational Sport
Journal of Clinical Sport Psychology
Exploring the Sport–Alcohol Relationship: A Longitudinal Qualitative Study of Student-Athlete Drinking Following the Transition out of University
Mark Jankowski, Sarah Partington, Nick Heather, and Elizabeth Partington
Individuals who participate in university sport have been found to engage in more hazardous drinking behaviors than their nonathlete student peers. This includes consuming greater quantities of alcohol, drinking more frequently, and engaging in more binge or heavy episodic drinking ( Martens et
Erratum. The Relationship Between Childhood Trauma, Exercise Addiction, Emotion Regulation Difficulties, and Basic Psychological Needs in Türkiye
Journal of Clinical Sport Psychology
Sport Psychology . Advanced online publication. https://doi.org/10.1123/jcsp.2023-0036 The first author’s last name was incorrectly listed as Arayici instead of Gültekin Arayici. The article was corrected May 6, 2024. The authors apologize for the error.
Eras of Burnout Research: What Does the Past Tell Us About the Future of Burnout in Sport?
J.D. DeFreese, Daniel J. Madigan, and Henrik Gustafsson
In the first volume of our special issue on Burnout in Sport and Performance in the Journal of Clinical Sport Psychology , we provided our (and other experts in the field’s) thoughts on where burnout research and practice efforts in sport should go in the future. However, we cannot fully and
Introducing Empowered Consent to Deal With the Current Challenges in Applied Sport Psychology
Niels Boysen Feddersen
This paper introduces empowered consent as a novel and robust approach to dealing with consent between a client and a sport psychology practitioner (whether accredited with a protected title or not). It must be acknowledged that ethical challenges in sport inhibit best practices in sport psychology
The Operationalizing Intersectionality Framework
Debra Kriger, Amélie Keyser-Verreault, Janelle Joseph, and Danielle Peers
, or otherwise supporting athletes and sport. Approaches that are intersectional consider the experience of overlapping, simultaneous systems of oppression ( Crenshaw, 1989 ). Black feminist legal scholar Kimberlé Crenshaw coined the concept of intersectionality through her examination of several legal
Development and Validation of the Greek Version of Weight Pressures in Sport—Females Questionnaire
Ioanna Kontele, Tonia Vassilakou, Maria Psychountaki, Justine J. Reel, and Olyvia Donti
). Although EDs and DE are multifactorial disorders, depending on genetic, biological, psychological, sociocultural, and environmental factors, specific parameters in sport environments may contribute to their development ( Collier & Treasure, 2004 ; Sundgot-Borgen et al., 2013 ; Wells et al., 2020 ). In
What Lies Beneath: Exploring Different Depressive Symptoms Across Selected Risk Factors in Icelandic Team Sport Athletes
Richard Tahtinen, Hafrun Kristjansdottir, Daniel T. Olason, and Robert Morris
is now an empirically grounded consensus that athletes are a unique population challenged by a range of generic and sport-specific stressors ( Küttel & Larsen, 2019 ; Reardon et al., 2019 ; Wolanin et al., 2015 ) and that prevalence rates of depressive symptoms in athletes may be comparable with
Exploring the Association Between Sport Participation and Symptoms of Anxiety and Depression in a Sample of Canadian High School Students
Jessica Murphy, Karen A. Patte, Philip Sullivan, and Scott T. Leatherdale
’Loughlin, Beauchamp, Martineau, & Fournier, 2016 ; Evans et al., 2017 ; Lubans et al., 2016 ). For instance, participation in team-sport and informal group activities was found to be inversely associated with depressive symptoms relative to individual physical activity ( Doré, O’Loughlin, Schnitzer, Datta
“It’s About Going From Good to Great”: Expert Approaches to Conducting a First Sport Psychology Session
Graig M. Chow, Lindsay M. Garinger, Jaison Freeman, Savanna K. Ward, and Matthew D. Bird
The first session with an athlete–client presents an opportunity to establish the working alliance, acquire useful information to facilitate case conceptualization, and develop an effective treatment plan with appropriate intervention. Although sport psychology professionals have independently