200

Using examples, describe three ways that athletes can practice substitute behaviours to displace anger behaviours.

  • Imagery: imaging a past anger-inducing experience in a positive way so that the incident was avoided, and success was had
  • Simulations: “questionable calls” made by coaches during practices so the athlete can practice their coping skills
  • Role-playing: act out anger-inducing situations and then appropriate responses to those
200

Briefly describe two strategies for minimizing the causes of excessive nervousness and tension. Give an example not in this chapter.

  • Recognize and change negative thinking (notice when you have negative self-talk and adjust to frame the thought into positive or constructive)
  • Structure the environment to prompt relaxing thoughts (listen to the same relaxing music right before competition)
200

In a sentence each, describe four strategies for changing the body’s reactions to stressful events.

  • Controlled breathing (deep centre breathing)
  • Maintain a sense of humour
  • Progressive muscle relaxation
  • Visualize a relaxing scene
200

Define “choking” as it is used in sports. Add an example not in this chapter.

Choking is defined as a steep decline in performance quality as a result of higher stakes or elevated anxiety under pressure, “leading to substandard performance”. This can be seen when a hockey game is going particularly poorly and one team is already down by a few goals, the goalie of the losing team may suddenly let in an influx of goals as the situation grows worse.

200

In a sentence each, summarize three important characteristics of our emotions, and name the type of conditioning involved in each.

  • The internal reaction felt during an emotion – respondent conditioning
  • How we learn to outwardly express emotions – operant conditioning
  • How we become aware of and describe our emotions – operant conditioning
400

Describe several strategies that might be used to minimize the likelihood of the occurrence of “choking” in sports.

These can be the 5 guidelines for eliminating negative thoughts, strategies for relaxing, or specific pre-performance routines.

400

Describe several physiological reactions experienced in a moment of fear.

  • Increased heart rate, rapid breathing, secrete adrenalin, “butterflies” in your stomach, all preparing for fight or flight.
400

Describe deep centre breathing.

 relax the neck and shoulders, breathe low in the stomach, say relax when exhaling

400

Using the model for respondent conditioning, diagram an example not in this chapter of respondent conditioning of an emotion in a sport context.

A hockey player hearing their goal celebration song in a normal context feels happy and celebratory.

600

List the four steps that have characterized successful anger management programs used with athletes.

  • Identify anger-causing situations
  • Teach substitute behaviours to compete with the anger
  • Practice the substitute behaviours using imagery, simulations, or role playing
  • Use the coping skills in competitive situations with monitoring and/or supportive contingencies
600

Describe unconditioned reflexes (the USs and the URs) that Watson observed that appear to characterize the emotions of fear, anger, and joy.

Fear: US of sudden loss of support, loud sounds, push – UR of sudden breath, grasping, and crying

Anger: US of hampering movements – UR of crying, screaming, and stiffening

Joy: US of tickling, gentle rocking, and patting – UR of smiling, gurgling, and cooing

600

Describe four effects of excessive nervousness and tension, and briefly explain why each effect might interfere with athletic performance at competitions.

  • Narrowing of attention makes an athlete less likely to attend to important external cues
  • Extra energy consumption can be problematic in endurance activities
  • Secretion of adrenalin leads athletes to rush, and timing is thrown off
  • Adding additional stimuli to the competitive environment harms generalization of skills from practice to competition
600

In the experiment with little Albert, what was the US, UR, CS, and CR?

  • US: bang noise
  • UR: crying
  • CS: white rat
  • CR: fear
800

Describe progressive muscle relaxation.

paying attention to each small group of muscles when tensing and then relaxing them

800

For each of the following emotions, identify a general cause and illustrate each cause with an example from your own experience.

  • Happiness: presentation of reinforcers (getting a good grade)
  • Anger: withholding or withdrawing reinforcers (tinnitus acting up – withdrawal of “normal” hearing)
  • Anxiety: encountering aversive stimuli (public speaking)
  • Relief: withdrawal of aversive or punishing events/stimuli (loud music is stopped)
800

What is meant by cognitive restructuring? Illustrate with a sport example.

Counteracting irrational self-statements with more positive and realistic statements. Instead of thinking “I have to score to win the game or we fail”, think “I will put in effort and use my skills to help my team”.

800

Describe an example that illustrates how “pride” might represent a combination of happiness and anger.

We experience happiness from the presentation of reinforcers and anger from the potential withdrawal of them. A team that wins the Stanley Cup is happy after winning, but angry that they could lose the title in the next season.

1000

List four different types of self-talk that might be taught to athletes to displace their anger. State an example not in this chapter.

  • General coping self-talk to stay in control
  • Specific cue words to elicit relaxed feelings
  • Self-talk to focus on a specific skill
  • Self-talk for acting rationally
1000

Describe which of the four steps of successful anger management programs were used with Seth at the start of the chapter.

Seth used step 4 (coping skills with monitoring and supporting contingencies) by him and his parents monitoring angry outbursts and his parents added the clicker as a supportive contingency.

1000

Describe an example to illustrate how you might use visualization to help you to relax.

Sit alone in quiet if possible and imagine a relaxing situation you have experienced before and repetitive calm moments, like waves crashing.

1000

List five guidelines that athletes should be encouraged to practice in order to estimate negative thoughts that cause them to be tense just before performing.

  • Use cognitive restructuring
  • Focus on what you can control, not what you can’t
  • Think about what you want to do, not what you don’t
  • Mentally review past successful performances
  • Focus on the process of competing, not potential outcomes
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