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The impact of music and imagery on physical performance and


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arousal: Studies of coordination and endurance.
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Cited by 11 (/search/citedBy/1992-26525-001)
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Dorney,
Go Lisa (/search/results?term=Dorney,%20Lisa&latSearchType=a) Goh, Emil K. (/search/results?term=Goh,%20Emil%20K.&latSearchType=a) Lee,
Christina (/search/results?term=Lee,%20Christina&latSearchType=a)

Citation
Dorney, L., Goh, E. K., & Lee, C. (1992). The impact of music and imagery on physical performance and arousal: Studies of coordination and endurance.
Journal of Sport Behavior, 15(1), 21–33.

Abstract
Reports on 2 studies of the relationships between music, heart rate (HR), and performance (PF) in physical tasks, using 70 university students. In the 1st study, 30
Ss performed a dart-throwing task on 3 occasions: without music, after listening to slow classical music, and after listening to fast modern music. PF did not differ
across conditions, but HR was significantly lowered after listening to either type of music. In the 2nd study, the possible relationship between music and imagery was
examined in 40 Ss by comparing preparation with imagery alone or imagery plus music for PF of number of bent-knee sit-ups done in 30 sec. Task PF improved
equally over baseline for both groups. The imagery-plus-music group showed a significant increase in HR during preparation, but HR was not related to task PF.
(French abstract) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)

Database: APA PsycInfo

Document Type: Journal Article

Citation
Dorney, L., Goh, E. K., & Lee, C. (1992). The impact of music and imagery on physical performance and arousal: Studies of coordination and
endurance. Journal of Sport Behavior, 15(1), 21–33.

Abstract
Reports on 2 studies of the relationships between music, heart rate (HR), and performance (PF) in physical tasks, using 70 university students. In the 1st
study, 30 Ss performed a dart-throwing task on 3 occasions: without music, after listening to slow classical music, and after listening to fast modern
music. PF did not differ across conditions, but HR was significantly lowered after listening to either type of music. In the 2nd study, the possible
relationship between music and imagery was examined in 40 Ss by comparing preparation with imagery alone or imagery plus music for PF of number of
bent-knee sit-ups done in 30 sec. Task PF improved equally over baseline for both groups. The imagery-plus-music group showed a significant increase
in HR during preparation, but HR was not related to task PF. (French abstract) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)

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