Professor Tim Woodman

Professor in Sport & Exercise

Contact info

Tim Woodman is a leading Professor of Performance Psychology. He is world-renowned for his work on personality, stress, and anxiety. He has also developed a theory of risk-taking that places risk at the centre of human endeavour. In other words, according to Prof Woodman, risk is essential for human development, including in elite sport. He is currently accepting PhD students that have an interest in developing these topics.

  1. Article › Research › Peer-reviewed
  2. Published

    A case study of organizational stress in elite sport

    Woodman, T. & Hardy, L., 1 Jun 2001, In: Journal of Applied Sport Psychology. 13, 2, p. 207-238

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

  3. Published

    A longitudinal examination of the interactive effects of goal importance and self-efficacy upon multiple life goal progress

    Beattie, S. J., Hardy, L. J. & Woodman, T., 6 Apr 2015, In: Canadian Journal of Behavioural Sciences. 47, 3, p. 201-206

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

  4. Published

    A systematic review of sport-based life skills programs for young people: The quality of design and evaluation methods

    Williams, C., Neil, R., Cropley, B., Woodman, T. & Roberts, R., 4 Mar 2022, In: Journal of Applied Sport Psychology. 34, 2, p. 409-435 27 p.

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

  5. Published

    Advances and perspectives in the understanding of stress-performance catastrophe models.

    Woodman, T., Hardy, L. & Beattie, S., 1 Jul 2005, In: Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology. 27, Supplement S, p. S28-S28

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

  6. Published

    Agentic emotion regulation in high-risk sport: An in-depth analysis across climbing disciplines

    Willegers, M., Woodman, T. & Tilley, F., Apr 2023, In: Personality and Individual Differences. 204, 112061.

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

  7. Published

    Alexithymia and the anxiolytic effect of endurance running

    Woodman, T. & Welch, C., Mar 2022, In: Sport Psychologist. 36, 1, p. 40-46 7 p.

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

  8. Published

    Alexithymia determines the anxiety experienced in skydiving

    Woodman, T., Huggins, M., Le Scanff, C. & Cazenave, N., 1 Jul 2009, In: Journal of Affective Disorders. 116, 1-2, p. 134-138

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

  9. Published

    Anxiety and Ironic Errors of Performance: Task Instruction Matters

    Gorgulu, R., Cooke, A. & Woodman, T., Apr 2019, In: Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology. 41, 2, p. 82-95 14 p.

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

  10. Published

    Anxiety induced performance catastrophes: investigating effort required as an asymmetry factor.

    Hardy, L., Beattie, S. J. & Woodman, T., 1 Feb 2007, In: British Journal of Psychology. 98, 1, p. 15-31

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

  11. Published

    Athletes' inclination to play through pain: a coping perspective.

    Deroche, T., Woodman, T., Stephan, Y., Brewer, B. W. & Le Scanff, C., 15 Feb 2011, In: Anxiety, Stress and Coping. 24, 5, p. 579-587

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ...15 Next