Performance in Sports
Attribution theory posits that ability, effort, task difficulty, and luck are the major attributional factors that cause success and failure in sport. Effort is considered an internal factor while task difficulty is considered an external factor. Ability is considered a permanent factor while luck is a changeable factor. The reformulated learned helplessness model sought to come up with the most relevant causal dimensions. The model suggests that the specificity of attributions combines with causal internality and stability to influence emotions and behavior. The model avers that global factors influence events like laziness while specific factors influence particular events like temporary fatigue. Adaptive reactions, according to helplessness theory, are occasioned by negative outcomes that are attributed to external, unstable, and specific factors. Adaptive reactions can also be facilitated when positive outcomes are attributed to internal, stable, and global factors. Outcomes that suggest that an athlete has high ability have been attributed to internal factors more than the outcomes that do not imply high ability. Athletes perceived to be having high ability make more internal, stable, and controllable attributions than athletes with low perceived ability. Grove & Prapavessis (1995) posit that negative emotional and motivational reactions are minimized when unsuccessful outcomes are attributed to internal, stable, and global causes. The duo, in their study of squash players, found out that the players' attributions were consistent with helplessness theory regarding the stability and globality dimensions. However, there were inconsistencies with helplessness theory with regard to internality dimensions. The causes attributed to competitive failure were significantly less stable and global than those cited for competitive success. The causes were nevertheless strongly internal regardless of the outcome. The findings of this study were consistent with those of other studies where unexpected results have been found regarding self-serving bias. Sports scientists have thus far failed in their bid to document self-serving bias. These inconsistent findings have largely been attributed to situational norms in sport because they discourage externalization of failure hence undermine the classic self-serving bias. High ability players have a thing for internalizing success more than failure something that low ability players tend not to engage in. high ability players also make more stable attributions more than low ability players regardless of the outcomes. Grove & Prapavessis (1995) are convinced that ability levels cannot influence causal attributions for sport outcomes. However, they are unanimous that strong manipulation of the ability factor can be used to detect this effect. Helplessness theory provided an adequate frame of reference for the duo's finding especially with regard to causal stability and globality that varied as a function of competitive outcomes. It henceforth reflected adaptive orientation consistent with reformulated helplessness model. The use if internal attributions, even after failure, were inconsistent with helplessness theory.
Allen, Jones & Sheffield (2009) while investigating the effect of team-referent attributions on emotions and collective efficacy established that collective efficacy and emotions are important determinants of performance accomplishments in group achievement. Teams that have established that victory is residing within them strongly believe that they have conjoint capabilities. Perception of team control combined with perception of stability show variation in collective efficacy in winning and losing teams. When cause of team defeat is thought of as being under control of others, the stability of the cause is unimportant for collective efficacy beliefs. When the cause is perceived to be under control of others a stable attribution can be detrimental to collective efficacy. This finding provides a logical representation of how interactive effects of attribution dimensions operate in competitive groups. When match officials are thought to be behind team defeat, the recurrence of the failure should not logically affect beliefs about the team's capability. However, the action of match official can influence the likelihood of attaining future team success. A stable attribution for team defeat cannot impair collective efficacy. Higher levels of collective efficacy for wining teams are associated with attributions perceived as stable over time and under the control of the team. This is a departure from the previous findings of research on self-efficacy where interaction effects of stability and control are not associated with self-efficacy beliefs of successful athletes. Allen & Jones (2009) suggest that interventions that target collective efficacy should integrate interactive effects of stability and control attributions. According to this study, there are no strong associations between team attribution and emotional responses. It is only happiness that had significant relationship team controllable attributions that were associated with higher levels of happiness. This finding was consistent with previous attribution researches...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now