Plasma cortisol concentrations and perceived anxiety in response to on-sight rock climbing

N. Draper*, T. Dickson, S. Fryer, G. Blackwell, D. Winter, C. Scarrott, G. Ellis

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

19 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Previous research suggested plasma cortisol concentrations in response to rock climbing have a cubic relationship with state anxiety and self-confidence. This research, however, was conducted in a situation where the climbers had previously climbed the route. The purpose of our study was to examine this relationship in response to on-sight climbing. Nineteen (13 male, 6 female) intermediate climbers volunteered to attend anthropometric and baseline testing sessions, prior to an on-sight ascent (lead climb or top-rope) of the test climb (grade 19 Ewbank/6a sport/5.10b YDS). Data recorded included state anxiety, self-confidence and cortisol concentrations prior to completing the climb. Results indicated that there were no significant differences in state anxiety, self-confidence and plasma cortisol concentration regardless of the style of ascent (lead climb or top-rope) in an on-sight sport climbing context. Regression analysis indicated there was a significant linear relationship between plasma cortisol concentrations and self-confidence (r=0.52, R 2=0.267, p=0.024), cognitive (r=0.5, R 2=0.253, p=0.028), and somatic anxieties (r=0.46, R 2=0.210, p=0.049). In an on-sight condition the relationships between plasma cortisol concentrations with anxiety (cognitive and somatic) and self-confidence were linear.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)13-17
Number of pages5
JournalInternational Journal of Sports Medicine
Volume33
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2012
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • lead climbing
  • plasma cortisol concentration
  • psychophysiology
  • rock climbing
  • top-roping

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