Speaking clearly … 10 years on: The case for an integrative perspective of self-talk in sport
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In: Sport, Exercise, and Performance Psychology, Vol. 8, No. 4, 01.11.2019, p. 353-367.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Speaking clearly … 10 years on
T2 - The case for an integrative perspective of self-talk in sport
AU - Latinjak, Alexander T.
AU - Hatzigeorgiadis, Antonis
AU - Comoutos, Nikos
AU - Hardy, James
N1 - © 2019, American Psychological Association. This paper is not the copy of record and may not exactly replicate the final, authoritative version of the article. Please do not copy or cite without authors' permission. The final article will be available, upon publication, via its DOI:10.1037/spy0000160
PY - 2019/11/1
Y1 - 2019/11/1
N2 - Over a decade ago, Hardy (2006) published his literature review that contained a working definition that has shaped subsequent studies about self-talk, contributing to the noticeable expansion of this research area. The rapid development of the self-talk literature in sport since then has bred the need to rethink how self-talk is conceptualized. The purpose of the present article was twofold: (a) to review how conceptualizations of self-talk and the associated research perspectives have changed during the past decade and (b) to introduce a new integrative conceptualization of sport self-talk. We identify two main developments that alter our view of what self-talk is, reinforcing the need for a new conceptualization: The identification of two distinct self-talk entities (organic self-talk and strategic self-talk); and the distinctions between spontaneous and goal-directed self-talk, as these emerged within organic self-talk. Consequently, we propose a new integrative conceptualization of self-talk. We believe that for such a conceptualization to be sufficient so as to guide future research, several attributes of self-talk ought to be recognized: the necessary and sufficient attributes that define self-talk, and important descriptive attributes, including overtness, interpretation, origins, and functions, which facilitate the understanding and the study of the self-talk phenomena.
AB - Over a decade ago, Hardy (2006) published his literature review that contained a working definition that has shaped subsequent studies about self-talk, contributing to the noticeable expansion of this research area. The rapid development of the self-talk literature in sport since then has bred the need to rethink how self-talk is conceptualized. The purpose of the present article was twofold: (a) to review how conceptualizations of self-talk and the associated research perspectives have changed during the past decade and (b) to introduce a new integrative conceptualization of sport self-talk. We identify two main developments that alter our view of what self-talk is, reinforcing the need for a new conceptualization: The identification of two distinct self-talk entities (organic self-talk and strategic self-talk); and the distinctions between spontaneous and goal-directed self-talk, as these emerged within organic self-talk. Consequently, we propose a new integrative conceptualization of self-talk. We believe that for such a conceptualization to be sufficient so as to guide future research, several attributes of self-talk ought to be recognized: the necessary and sufficient attributes that define self-talk, and important descriptive attributes, including overtness, interpretation, origins, and functions, which facilitate the understanding and the study of the self-talk phenomena.
KW - Athletes
KW - Thoughts
KW - Private Speech
KW - Conceptualization
KW - Cognitive processes
U2 - 10.1037/spy0000160
DO - 10.1037/spy0000160
M3 - Article
VL - 8
SP - 353
EP - 367
JO - Sport, Exercise, and Performance Psychology
JF - Sport, Exercise, and Performance Psychology
SN - 2157-3905
IS - 4
ER -