Ironic effects of performance are worse for neurotics

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Ironic effects of performance are worse for neurotics. / Barlow, M.D.; Woodman, Tim; Gorgulu, R. et al.
In: Psychology of Sport and Exercise, Vol. 24, 21.12.2015, p. 27-37.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Barlow, MD, Woodman, T, Gorgulu, R & Voyzey, RM 2015, 'Ironic effects of performance are worse for neurotics', Psychology of Sport and Exercise, vol. 24, pp. 27-37. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychsport.2015.12.005

APA

Barlow, M. D., Woodman, T., Gorgulu, R., & Voyzey, R. M. (2015). Ironic effects of performance are worse for neurotics. Psychology of Sport and Exercise, 24, 27-37. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychsport.2015.12.005

CBE

Barlow MD, Woodman T, Gorgulu R, Voyzey RM. 2015. Ironic effects of performance are worse for neurotics. Psychology of Sport and Exercise. 24:27-37. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychsport.2015.12.005

MLA

Barlow, M.D. et al. "Ironic effects of performance are worse for neurotics". Psychology of Sport and Exercise. 2015, 24. 27-37. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychsport.2015.12.005

VancouverVancouver

Barlow MD, Woodman T, Gorgulu R, Voyzey RM. Ironic effects of performance are worse for neurotics. Psychology of Sport and Exercise. 2015 Dec 21;24:27-37. doi: 10.1016/j.psychsport.2015.12.005

Author

Barlow, M.D. ; Woodman, Tim ; Gorgulu, R. et al. / Ironic effects of performance are worse for neurotics. In: Psychology of Sport and Exercise. 2015 ; Vol. 24. pp. 27-37.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ironic effects of performance are worse for neurotics

AU - Barlow, M.D.

AU - Woodman, Tim

AU - Gorgulu, R.

AU - Voyzey, R.M.

PY - 2015/12/21

Y1 - 2015/12/21

N2 - Objectives To conduct the first examination of neuroticism as a predictor of (1) the incidence of what Wegner (1989, 2009) terms ironic processes of mental control and (2) the precision of ironic performance errors under high- and low-anxiety conditions. Design Across two studies we employed a repeated-measures design. Method In a football penalty-shooting task (Study 1) and a dart-throwing (Study 2) task, under high-anxiety and low-anxiety conditions, participants gained maximum points for hitting a target zone and fewer points for hitting a designated non-ironic error zone. Additionally, we instructed participants to be particularly careful not to hit a designated ironic error zone, because such hits would score minimum points. Results Across both studies within-subjects moderation analyses revealed a consistent moderating effect of neuroticism on the incidence of ironic errors in the high-anxiety condition. Specifically, when anxious, neurotics displayed a significant increase in ironic performance error and a significant decrease in target hits. Importantly, non-ironic error did not differ across anxiety conditions. Additionally, Study 2 results revealed that neuroticism moderated the precision of ironic errors when anxious. Specifically, when anxious, neurotics’ ironic error zone hits were significantly farther from the target zone and significantly farther into the ironic error zone than their relatively emotionally stable counterparts’ errors. Conclusion We provide the first evidence that neuroticism moderates both the incidence and precision of ironic performance errors. These results will enable practitioners in coaching environments to make evidence-based predictions and interventions regarding which individuals are most prone to ironic performance breakdown when anxious.

AB - Objectives To conduct the first examination of neuroticism as a predictor of (1) the incidence of what Wegner (1989, 2009) terms ironic processes of mental control and (2) the precision of ironic performance errors under high- and low-anxiety conditions. Design Across two studies we employed a repeated-measures design. Method In a football penalty-shooting task (Study 1) and a dart-throwing (Study 2) task, under high-anxiety and low-anxiety conditions, participants gained maximum points for hitting a target zone and fewer points for hitting a designated non-ironic error zone. Additionally, we instructed participants to be particularly careful not to hit a designated ironic error zone, because such hits would score minimum points. Results Across both studies within-subjects moderation analyses revealed a consistent moderating effect of neuroticism on the incidence of ironic errors in the high-anxiety condition. Specifically, when anxious, neurotics displayed a significant increase in ironic performance error and a significant decrease in target hits. Importantly, non-ironic error did not differ across anxiety conditions. Additionally, Study 2 results revealed that neuroticism moderated the precision of ironic errors when anxious. Specifically, when anxious, neurotics’ ironic error zone hits were significantly farther from the target zone and significantly farther into the ironic error zone than their relatively emotionally stable counterparts’ errors. Conclusion We provide the first evidence that neuroticism moderates both the incidence and precision of ironic performance errors. These results will enable practitioners in coaching environments to make evidence-based predictions and interventions regarding which individuals are most prone to ironic performance breakdown when anxious.

U2 - 10.1016/j.psychsport.2015.12.005

DO - 10.1016/j.psychsport.2015.12.005

M3 - Article

VL - 24

SP - 27

EP - 37

JO - Psychology of Sport and Exercise

JF - Psychology of Sport and Exercise

SN - 1469-0292

ER -