Be Prosocial My Friend: The Social Disconnection Model of Perfectionism in Adolescents Immersed in Competitive Sport
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Rodríguez Franco, Alvaro; Carlo, Gustavo; Valdivia Moral, Pedro Angel; González Hernández, JuanEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Prosocial behavior Aggressiveness Competitive contexts
Date
2023-02-07Referencia bibliográfica
Rodríguez-Franco, A.; Carlo, G.; Valdivia-Moral, P.; González-Hernández, J. Be Prosocial My Friend: The Social Disconnection Model of Perfectionism in Adolescents Immersed in Competitive Sport. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 2887. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20042887
Abstract
The aim of the present study is to explore the relationships between cognitive–behavioral
patterns of perfectionism in the context of competitive sport and both prosociality and aggressiveness
in a sample of adolescents competing in federated sports. A cross-sectional and non-randomized
study was designed using a selective methodology on a sample of adolescents (N = 234) competing
in federated sports. Scales to assess aggressiveness, perfectionism, prosocial behavior, and competitiveness
were administrated. The results show that as age increases, prosocial behaviors increase and
aggressive behaviors and competitiveness decrease, while there was no one significant perfectionist
tendency. Competitiveness showed a direct relationship with aggressive (positive) and prosocial
behaviors (negative). Self-oriented perfectionistic behavior showed a direct and significant relationship
with prosocial behaviors, but no significant relationship with aggressive responses. As P-SP
and P-OD tendencies increased, significantly smaller links were shown with prosocial behaviors, but
greater links were shown with aggressive behaviors. A path (mediation) model showed a positive
and predictive relationship with aggressive behaviors and a negative relationship with prosocial
altruistic behaviors. The negative influence of criticism from significant figures in their environment
and unrealistic expectations about their performance are relevant to difficulties in self-regulating
social relationships in adolescents. Hence, it is a challenge to promote prosocial resources (as a protective
value for aggressive behaviors) in the face of the early angst of young athletes, who put their
maturity to the test under conditions of high pressure and demands. The present study continues
to reinforce the line drawn on perfectionism and prosocial development in young people in sports
contexts where young people, measured early on according to their performance, can accentuate and
deepen competitive tendencies that alter their adaptive and self-regulatory capacities, as well as their
psychosocial projection.