Publication | Closed Access
Investigating the Relationships among Motivation, Negotiation, and Alpine Skiing Participation
100
Citations
41
References
2007
Year
NegotiationLeisure StudyNegotiation TheoryBehavioral Decision MakingConsumer MotivationSocial PsychologyExercise PsychologyOrganizational BehaviorPsychologySocial SciencesSport Motivation ScaleAchievement GoalSport ParticipationSki Resort ManagementBehavioral SciencesNegotiation StrategiesCommunity EngagementMotivationMotivation PsychologyApplied Social PsychologyMotivational TheoryPerformance StudiesNegotiation DimensionsBusinessSport PsychologyMotivational LearningAchievement MotivationAlpine Skiing Participation
The study aimed to investigate how recreational skiers use negotiation strategies to overcome constraints and to test whether negotiation mediates the link between motivation and intention to continue skiing. A sample of 220 recreational skiers completed the Sport Motivation Scale and a fifteen‑item negotiation scale, and exploratory factor analysis identified five negotiation dimensions: improve skiing knowledge, adjust lifestyle, acquire resort information, time management, and find partners. Intrinsic and extrinsic motivation were significantly associated with continued skiing intention, with time management and improve skiing knowledge dimensions contributing most, and negotiation partially mediated the relationship between intrinsic motivation and intention. Keywords: motivation, negotiation, recreational skiing.
AbstractThis study aimed to investigate the negotiation strategies used by recreational skiers to overcome constraints' influences, and to test the degree to which negotiation acts as a mediator of the relationship between motivation and intention to continue participation. Two hundred and twenty (N = 220) recreational skiers completed the intrinsic and extrinsic dimensions of the Sport Motivation Scale (Pelletier et al., 1995) and a fifteen-item negotiation scale. Five negotiation dimensions were revealed by an exploratory factor analysis: "improve skiing knowledge," "adjust lifestyle," "acquire information regarding resorts," "time management," and "find partners." The results indicated that: (a) both intrinsic and extrinsic motivation had statistical significant associations with intention to continue skiing, (b) the "time management" and "improve skiing knowledge" dimensions offered significant contributions to the prediction of intention, (c) the negotiation dimensions partially (not fully) mediated the relationship between intrinsic motivation and intention. These results provide support for the negotiation proposition, developed by Jackson et al. (1993), and further explain the relationships among motivation, negotiation, and an individual's leisure behavior.KEYWORDS: Motivationnegotiationrecreational skiing
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