Publication | Closed Access
Motivation Mediates the Perfectionism–Burnout Relationship: A Three-Wave Longitudinal Study With Junior Athletes
83
Citations
55
References
2016
Year
Autonomous MotivationEducational PsychologyAthlete BurnoutExercise PsychologySocial SciencesPsychologyExercisePerfectionism–burnout RelationshipSport ScienceThree-wave Longitudinal StudyHealth SciencesJunior AthletesAchievement GoalBehavioral SciencesSelf-determination Theory PerspectiveMotivationApplied Social PsychologyHigh-performance SportSport PsychologyAchievement Motivation
Perfectionism in sports has been shown to predict longitudinal changes in athlete burnout. What mediates these changes over time, however, is still unclear. Adopting a self-determination theory perspective and using a three-wave longitudinal design, the current study examined perfectionistic strivings, perfectionistic concerns, autonomous motivation, controlled motivation, and athlete burnout in 141 junior athletes (mean age = 17.3 years) over 6 months of active training. When multilevel structural equation modeling was employed to test a mediational model, a differential pattern of between- and within-person relationships emerged. Whereas autonomous motivation mediated the negative relationship that perfectionistic strivings had with burnout at the between- and within-person level, controlled motivation mediated the positive relationship that perfectionistic concerns had with burnout at the between-persons level only. The present findings suggest that differences in autonomous and controlled motivation explain why perfectionism predicts changes in athlete burnout over time.
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