The comparison of Imagery ability in elite, sub-elite and non-elite swimmers

ABSTRACT The ability to generate and control mental images is present in all of us, but it differs from person to person. Therefore, it is important to understand that imagery ability can be changed through training and experimentation, it is not a fixed ability. The aim of this study is to compare imagery ability in elite, sub-elite and non-elite athletes in a sport which involves closed and continuous motor skills, such as swimming. 79 swimmers (male N = 37; female N = 42) at an average age of 17 took part in this study. In order to assess imagery ability, the Movement Imagery Questionnaire 3 was used, Portuguese version (Mendes et al., 2016). After analysis of the results, these show that in each and every imagery modality, the scores in the three groups differ significantly. In kinesthetic and external visual imagery the elite and sub-elite groups’ scores, although not statistically different from each other, are significantly higher than those of the non-elite group. In internal visual imagery, the differences between all the compared pairs of groups are statistically significant. The elite group got the highest scores, followed by the sub-elite group average scores and finally the non-elite group average scores. According to these results, the conclusion is that athletes with better performance show greater imagery ability and that apparently the external visual imagery proved to be the best intervention method among swimming athletes.

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Main Authors: Duarte Mendes,Pedro, Marinho,Daniel, Monteiro,Diogo, Cid,Luís, Paulo,Rui, Serrano,João, Petrica,João
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Murcia 2019
Online Access:http://scielo.isciii.es/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1578-84232019000200010
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spelling oai:scielo:S1578-842320190002000102020-11-11The comparison of Imagery ability in elite, sub-elite and non-elite swimmersDuarte Mendes,PedroMarinho,DanielMonteiro,DiogoCid,LuísPaulo,RuiSerrano,JoãoPetrica,João Imagery movement imagery questionnaire - 3 athlete level swimming ABSTRACT The ability to generate and control mental images is present in all of us, but it differs from person to person. Therefore, it is important to understand that imagery ability can be changed through training and experimentation, it is not a fixed ability. The aim of this study is to compare imagery ability in elite, sub-elite and non-elite athletes in a sport which involves closed and continuous motor skills, such as swimming. 79 swimmers (male N = 37; female N = 42) at an average age of 17 took part in this study. In order to assess imagery ability, the Movement Imagery Questionnaire 3 was used, Portuguese version (Mendes et al., 2016). After analysis of the results, these show that in each and every imagery modality, the scores in the three groups differ significantly. In kinesthetic and external visual imagery the elite and sub-elite groups’ scores, although not statistically different from each other, are significantly higher than those of the non-elite group. In internal visual imagery, the differences between all the compared pairs of groups are statistically significant. The elite group got the highest scores, followed by the sub-elite group average scores and finally the non-elite group average scores. According to these results, the conclusion is that athletes with better performance show greater imagery ability and that apparently the external visual imagery proved to be the best intervention method among swimming athletes.Universidad de MurciaCuadernos de Psicología del Deporte v.19 n.2 20192019-01-01journal articletext/htmlhttp://scielo.isciii.es/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1578-84232019000200010en
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country España
countrycode ES
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libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Duarte Mendes,Pedro
Marinho,Daniel
Monteiro,Diogo
Cid,Luís
Paulo,Rui
Serrano,João
Petrica,João
spellingShingle Duarte Mendes,Pedro
Marinho,Daniel
Monteiro,Diogo
Cid,Luís
Paulo,Rui
Serrano,João
Petrica,João
The comparison of Imagery ability in elite, sub-elite and non-elite swimmers
author_facet Duarte Mendes,Pedro
Marinho,Daniel
Monteiro,Diogo
Cid,Luís
Paulo,Rui
Serrano,João
Petrica,João
author_sort Duarte Mendes,Pedro
title The comparison of Imagery ability in elite, sub-elite and non-elite swimmers
title_short The comparison of Imagery ability in elite, sub-elite and non-elite swimmers
title_full The comparison of Imagery ability in elite, sub-elite and non-elite swimmers
title_fullStr The comparison of Imagery ability in elite, sub-elite and non-elite swimmers
title_full_unstemmed The comparison of Imagery ability in elite, sub-elite and non-elite swimmers
title_sort comparison of imagery ability in elite, sub-elite and non-elite swimmers
description ABSTRACT The ability to generate and control mental images is present in all of us, but it differs from person to person. Therefore, it is important to understand that imagery ability can be changed through training and experimentation, it is not a fixed ability. The aim of this study is to compare imagery ability in elite, sub-elite and non-elite athletes in a sport which involves closed and continuous motor skills, such as swimming. 79 swimmers (male N = 37; female N = 42) at an average age of 17 took part in this study. In order to assess imagery ability, the Movement Imagery Questionnaire 3 was used, Portuguese version (Mendes et al., 2016). After analysis of the results, these show that in each and every imagery modality, the scores in the three groups differ significantly. In kinesthetic and external visual imagery the elite and sub-elite groups’ scores, although not statistically different from each other, are significantly higher than those of the non-elite group. In internal visual imagery, the differences between all the compared pairs of groups are statistically significant. The elite group got the highest scores, followed by the sub-elite group average scores and finally the non-elite group average scores. According to these results, the conclusion is that athletes with better performance show greater imagery ability and that apparently the external visual imagery proved to be the best intervention method among swimming athletes.
publisher Universidad de Murcia
publishDate 2019
url http://scielo.isciii.es/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1578-84232019000200010
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