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      Competitive Recovery–Stress and Mood States in Mexican Youth Athletes

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          Abstract

          Background

          Monitoring recovery–stress balance in sport is becoming more relevant to prevent training maladaptation and reach the optimal performance for each athlete. The use of questionnaires that identify the athlete’s recovery–stress state have much acceptance in sports due to reliability and useful, furthermore for its low cost. Identifying possible differences between sport modalities and sex is important to determine specific needs and possible intervention ways to keep a recovery–stress balance. The aim was to analyze the differences in the recovery–stress state and mood states by sex and sport type during the competitive phase in young Mexican athletes. As a secondary objective, the psychometric properties of the Mexican version of the Recovery–Stress Questionnaire for Athletes (RESTQ-Sport) were analyzed.

          Methods

          A cross-sectional study was carried on with 461 athletes (61% women and 39% men), 17.95 (±1.2) years old, from six sports disciplines. The RESTQ-Sport and Profile of Mood States (POMS) were applied in a single moment. Differences by sex and sports modality were analyzed. RESTQ-Sport’s confirmatory factor analysis was performed after the stress and recovery theoretical structure of two stress (general and sport) and two recovery (general and sport) dimensions, and last, the concurrent validation with the POMS was carried on.

          Results

          Significant differences by sex were found in the General Recovery and Sport Stress dimensions of the RESTQ-Sport as well as Vigor factor of the POMS, being higher for men; furthermore, both the Sport Recovery dimension of RESTQ-Sport and Cholera and the Fatigue and Depression factors from POMS also had differences by sport type, showing a less recovery and high stress for individual sport athletes. Goodness-of-fit indexes of the model for the RESTQ-Sport were acceptable. Pearson’s correlation between questionnaires was moderate ( p < 0.05).

          Conclusion

          The recovery–stress state shows differences in the function of sex and sport modality. More special attention is suggested for women and individual sport athletes. The higher punctuation for men compared with women in sport stress dimension did not negatively affect the recovery–stress balance for male athletes. Finally, the Mexican context adaptation of the RESTQ-Sport provides a psychometric instrument suitable to assess the recovery–stress balance in Mexican athletes.

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          Most cited references48

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          Coefficient alpha and the internal structure of tests

          Psychometrika, 16(3), 297-334
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            World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki: ethical principles for medical research involving human subjects.

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              Statistical notes for clinical researchers: assessing normal distribution (2) using skewness and kurtosis

              As discussed in the previous statistical notes, although many statistical methods have been proposed to test normality of data in various ways, there is no current gold standard method. The eyeball test may be useful for medium to large sized (e.g., n > 50) samples, however may not useful for small samples. The formal normality tests including Shapiro-Wilk test and Kolmogorov-Smirnov test may be used from small to medium sized samples (e.g., n 2.1 Kurtosis is a measure of the peakedness of a distribution. The original kurtosis value is sometimes called kurtosis (proper) and West et al. (1996) proposed a reference of substantial departure from normality as an absolute kurtosis (proper) value > 7.1 For some practical reasons, most statistical packages such as SPSS provide 'excess' kurtosis obtained by subtracting 3 from the kurtosis (proper). The excess kurtosis should be zero for a perfectly normal distribution. Distributions with positive excess kurtosis are called leptokurtic distribution meaning high peak, and distributions with negative excess kurtosis are called platykurtic distribution meaning flat-topped curve. 2) Normality test using skewness and kurtosis A z-test is applied for normality test using skewness and kurtosis. A z-score could be obtained by dividing the skew values or excess kurtosis by their standard errors. As the standard errors get smaller when the sample size increases, z-tests under null hypothesis of normal distribution tend to be easily rejected in large samples with distribution which may not substantially differ from normality, while in small samples null hypothesis of normality tends to be more easily accepted than necessary. Therefore, critical values for rejecting the null hypothesis need to be different according to the sample size as follows: For small samples (n < 50), if absolute z-scores for either skewness or kurtosis are larger than 1.96, which corresponds with a alpha level 0.05, then reject the null hypothesis and conclude the distribution of the sample is non-normal. For medium-sized samples (50 < n < 300), reject the null hypothesis at absolute z-value over 3.29, which corresponds with a alpha level 0.05, and conclude the distribution of the sample is non-normal. For sample sizes greater than 300, depend on the histograms and the absolute values of skewness and kurtosis without considering z-values. Either an absolute skew value larger than 2 or an absolute kurtosis (proper) larger than 7 may be used as reference values for determining substantial non-normality. Referring to Table 1 and Figure 1, we could conclude all the data seem to satisfy the assumption of normality despite that the histogram of the smallest-sized sample doesn't appear as a symmetrical bell shape and the formal normality tests for the largest-sized sample were rejected against the normality null hypothesis. 3) How strict is the assumption of normality? Though the humble t test (assuming equal variances) and analysis of variance (ANOVA) with balanced sample sizes are said to be 'robust' to moderate departure from normality, generally it is not preferable to rely on the feature and to omit data evaluation procedure. A combination of visual inspection, assessment using skewness and kurtosis, and formal normality tests can be used to assess whether assumption of normality is acceptable or not. When we consider the data show substantial departure from normality, we may either transform the data, e.g., transformation by taking logarithms, or select a nonparametric method such that normality assumption is not required.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Front Psychol
                Front Psychol
                Front. Psychol.
                Frontiers in Psychology
                Frontiers Media S.A.
                1664-1078
                12 January 2021
                2020
                : 11
                : 627828
                Affiliations
                [1] 1Departamento de Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades, Universidad Autónoma de Occidente , Los Mochis, Mexico
                [2] 2Departamento de Investigación, Iniciativa Juvenil Colimense A.C. , Colima, Mexico
                [3] 3Centro de Investigación de Estadística Multivariante Aplicada, Universidad de Colima , Villa de Álvarez, Mexico
                [4] 4Facultad de Organización Deportiva, Universidad Autónoma de Nuevo León , San Nicolás de los Garza, Mexico
                [5] 5Departamento de Ciencias Económico-Administrativas, Universidad Autónoma de Occidente , Los Mochis, Mexico
                Author notes

                Edited by: Manuel Gómez-López, University of Murcia, Spain

                Reviewed by: Alfonso Valero-Valenzuela, University of Murcia, Spain; Antonino Bianco, University of Palermo, Italy; Antonio Granero-Gallegos, University of Almería, Spain

                *Correspondence: Luis Felipe Reynoso-Sánchez, felipe.reynoso@ 123456uadeo.mx

                This article was submitted to Movement Science and Sport Psychology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychology

                Article
                10.3389/fpsyg.2020.627828
                7835411
                33510698
                3ddb5d0b-d489-4869-ae90-9e7ea4af9619
                Copyright © 2021 Reynoso-Sánchez, Pérez-Verduzco, Celestino-Sánchez, López-Walle, Zamarripa, Rangel-Colmenero, Muñoz-Helú and Hernández-Cruz.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

                History
                : 10 November 2020
                : 10 December 2020
                Page count
                Figures: 1, Tables: 2, Equations: 0, References: 48, Pages: 9, Words: 0
                Funding
                Funded by: Universidad Autónoma de Occidente 10.13039/501100008791
                Award ID: 2019 Research Fomentation and Postgraduate of the Autonomous University of Occident
                Categories
                Psychology
                Original Research

                Clinical Psychology & Psychiatry
                restq-sport,poms (profile of mood states),gender differences,individual vs. team sports,confirmatory factor analysis-cfa,mexico

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