Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
891468 | Personality and Individual Differences | 2012 | 6 Pages |
Despite the prominence of sports in contemporary society, little is known about the identity and personality traits of sports spectators. With a sample of 293 individuals, we examine four broad categories of factors that may explain variability in the reported amount of time spent watching sports. Using individual difference regression techniques, we explore the relationship between sports spectating and physiological measures (e.g., testosterone and cortisol), clinical self-report scales (ADHD and autism), personality traits (e.g., NEO “Big Five”), and pastime activities (e.g., video game playing). Our results indicate that individuals who report higher levels of sports spectating tend to have higher levels of extraversion, and in particular excitement seeking and gregariousness. These individuals also engage more in complementary pastime activities, including participating in sports and exercise activities, watching TV/movies, and playing video games. Notably, no differences were observed in the clinical self-report scales, indicating no differences in reported symptoms of ADHD or autism for spectators and non-spectators. Likewise, no relationship was seen between baseline concentrations of testosterone or cortisol and sports spectating in our sample. These results provide an assessment of the descriptive personality dimensions of frequent sports spectators and provide a basic taxonomy of how these traits are expressed across the population.
► This study examines individual differences predictors of sports watching. ► Sports spectators are more likely to be extroverted. ► Sports spectators are more likely to exercise, watch TV, and play video games. ► No relationship found between sports watching and symptoms of ADHD or autism. ► No relationship found between sports watching and testosterone or cortisol measures.