Male and Female Athletes
The paper is an annotated bibliography for a paper examining gender based difference in concussion reporting among athletes. The sources include:
Angelini, J.R. (2008). Television sports and athlete sex: Looking at the differences in
watching male and female athletes. Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, 52(1), 16-32.
Anshel, M. (2009). Racial and gender differences on sources of acute stress and coping
style among competitive athletes. The Journal of Social Psychology, 149(2), 159-177.
Docheff, D.M. (2011). Dealing with differences: A coach's perspective. Journal of
Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 82(8), 33-35, 39.
Joesaar, H., Hein, V., & Hagger, M.S. (2011). Peer influence on young athletes' need
satisfaction, intrinsic motivation and persistence in sport: A 12-month prospective study. Psychology of Sport and Exercise, 12(5), 500-508.
Kassing, J.W. & Infante, D.A. (1999). Aggressive communication in coach-athlete
relationship. Communication Research Reports, 16(2), 110-120.
Mohaved, M. R. (2008). Differences according to gender in reporting physical symptoms
during echocardiographic screening in healthy teenage athletes. Cardiology in the Young, 18(3), 303-306.
Sullivan, P. (2004). Communication differences between male and female team sport
athletes. Communication Reports 17 (2 Summer), 121-128.
Elvis Presley: life, music, and cultural impact
This paper is a serious psychological study of Elvis Presley and his motivations through a series of different psychological paradigms. Erik Erikson's Stages of Development; Kohlberg's Moral Stages of Development;Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, and McClelland's Theory of Motivation are all used to answer the question as to why the singer pursed such a self-destructive path.