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Article
Psychological Skills Do Not Always Help Performance: The Moderating Role of Narcissism
Journal of Applied Sport Psychology
  • R. Roberts
  • T. Woodman
  • L. Hardy
  • L. Davis
  • Harry M. Wallace, Trinity University
Document Type
Post-Print
Publication Date
7-1-2013
Abstract

Psychological skills are typically viewed as beneficial to performance in competition. Conversely, narcissists appear to thrive in competitive environments so should not need psychological skills to the same degree as less narcissistic individuals. To investigate this moderating hypothesis high-standard ice-skaters completed measures of narcissism, psychological skills, and anxiety before performing their competition routine during training. A week later, participants performed the same routine in competition. Performance was operationalized as the difference between competition and training scores. Moderated regression analyses revealed that narcissism moderated the relationship between psychological skills and performance. Psychological skill effectiveness depends on an individual's degree of narcissism.

Identifier
10.1080/10413200.2012.731472
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Citation Information
Roberts, R., Woodman, T., Hardy, L., Davis, L., & Wallace, H. M. (2013). Psychological skills do not always help performance: The moderating role of narcissism. Journal of Applied Sport Psychology, 25(3), 316-325. doi: 10.1080/10413200.2012.731472