The objectives of this study were (1) to explore the Transition Monitoring Survey (TMS) for assessing athletes' transition from junior-to-senior sports, (2) to describe the transition from junior-to-senior sports in Swedish athletes based on the TMS data, and (3) to explore how the transition variables contribute to the athletes' perceived degree of adjustment to the senior level and to their sport and life satisfaction. The TMS was developed based on career development/transition frameworks and previous qualitative research on the transition from junior-to-senior sports. Altogether 416 participants organized in three samples were involved in this exploratory study. The study illuminated the strong points of the TMS as a theoretically based and culturally adapted instrument, but it also shed a light on some deficits of the TMS that should be eliminated in its further use in transition research.
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The primary aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of combining layered stimulus response training (LSRT) with one week of imagery rehearsal on exercise imagery ability. Further aims were to investigate pre- to post-intervention changes in exercise related feeling states and interest/enjoyment, and determine if imagery ability at post-intervention was associated with these variables. Forty-five women aged 19 to 50 years (
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