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Internal and external imagery perspective measurement and use in imagining open and closed sport skills: an exploratory study

Version 2 2024-06-17, 06:48
Version 1 2014-10-28, 08:48
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-17, 06:48 authored by M Spittle, T Morris
This study explored the measurement and use of internal and external imagery perspectives during imagery of open and closed sports skills. Participants  (N=41; male=23; female = 18), ages 14 to 28 (M=19.4 yr.; sD=3.1), who were recruited from undergraduate classes in human movement and physical education, and local sporting teams, completed the Imagery Use Questionnaire and then imagined performing eight common sports skills, four open skills and four closed skills, in a random order. Participants provided concurrent verbalisation during their imagery. Immediately after imagining each skill, participants completed a rating scale and retrospective verbalisation of imagery perspective use. Analysis indicated that the questionnaire gave a general imagery perspective preference but was not a strong predictor of imagery used on specific occasions. The three measures of imagery perspective were equivalent in imagining performing particular skills. Participants experienced more internal imagery than external imagery while imagining the eight sports skills, but there was no significant difference between perspective use on the open and closed skills.

History

Journal

Perceptual and motor skills

Volume

104

Pagination

387-404

Location

Missoula, Mont.

ISSN

0031-5125

eISSN

1558-688X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2007, Ammons Scientific

Publisher

Ammons Scientific Ltd

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