Metamotivational characteristics of exercise dependence and eating disorders in highly active amateur sport participants

By analyzing psychological characteristics of physically active participants, the aim of this investigation was to use the Reversal Theory (RT) framework to determine whether primary and secondary exercise dependence could be considered as (two distinct) and independent conditions. Highly active ama...

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Veröffentlicht in:Personality and individual differences 2004-04, Vol.36 (6), p.1419-1432
Hauptverfasser: Blaydon, Michelle J, Linder, Koenraad J, Kerr, John H
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creator Blaydon, Michelle J
Linder, Koenraad J
Kerr, John H
description By analyzing psychological characteristics of physically active participants, the aim of this investigation was to use the Reversal Theory (RT) framework to determine whether primary and secondary exercise dependence could be considered as (two distinct) and independent conditions. Highly active amateur participants ( N=393), of which 95 were clinically diagnosed as eating disordered, were allocated, on the basis of questionnaire responses, to one of four groups: Primary dependence ( n=58), secondary dependence ( n=52), eating disordered ( n=45) and a control group (no dependence or disordered group, n=238). Canonical correlation initially found eating disorders and exercise dependence to have a positive relationship with telic and arousal avoidance characteristics. Exercise dependence also displayed a positive relationship to autic metamotivational dominance. A positive correlation was also evident between pessimism and eating disorders. However, (M)ANOVA subsequently revealed the two eating disordered groups to be significantly more telic, and arousal avoiding, but lower on optimism and negativistic characteristics than the non-eating disordered groups. The control group scored significantly higher in mastery dominance than the primary group. These results suggest that at amateur levels of sport, primary exercise dependence is distinct in its psychological characteristics from secondary exercise dependence and thus the psychological needs it represents.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Adult and adolescent clinical studies
Biological and medical sciences
Dependency
Eating behavior disorders
Eating disorders
Exercise
Hong Kong
Medical sciences
Metamotivational dominance
Miscellaneous
Primary exercise dependence
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Reversal theory
Secondary exercise dependence
Subtypes
title Metamotivational characteristics of exercise dependence and eating disorders in highly active amateur sport participants
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