Extraversion and neuroticism in team sport participants, individual sport participants, and nonparticipants.

Jessica R Eagleton, Stuart J McKelvie, Anton de Man

Bishop's University, Sherbrooke, Québec, Canada.

Journal Article: Perceptual and Motor Skills (impact factor: 0.55). 09/2007; 105(1):265-75.

Abstract

Scores on Extraversion and on Neuroticism as measured by the Eysenck Personality Inventory were compared for 90 undergraduate team sport participants, individual sport participants, and nonparticipants (43 men, 47 women, M age = 20.3 yr.). From past research and Eysenck's biological theory of personality, it was hypothesized that sport participants would score higher on Extraversion and lower on Neuroticism than nonparticipants, and that team participants would score higher on Extraversion and perhaps higher on Neuroticism than individual sport participants. By comparing scores for students in first year and final year, it was also investigated whether pre-existing personality differences drew people to sport (the gravitational hypothesis) or whether personality changed as a function of sport participation (the developmental hypothesis). The main findings were that team participants scored higher on Extraversion than both individual sport participants and nonparticipants, and that test scores did not change over time, supporting the gravitational hypothesis for Extraversion.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

90 undergraduate team sport participants
 
developmental hypothesis
 
Extraversion
 
Eysenck Personality Inventory
 
Eysenck's biological theory
 
final year
 
gravitational hypothesis
 
individual sport participants
 
lower
 
M age
 
nonparticipants
 
pre-existing personality differences
 
Scores
 
sport participants
 
sport participation
 
team participants
 
test scores