Self representations and music performance anxiety: A study with professional and amateur musicians

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Abstract

Individual, social and situational factors might play an important role on the experience of anxiety during musical performances. The present research focused on the relationship between self-representations, including musical self, and performance anxiety among a sample of Italian professional and amateur musicians (N = 100; age, M = 23.40, 50% females). We predicted that higher self-discrepancies (actual vs. future self) would be associated with higher performance anxiety in a musical setting (vs. a non musical one), via musical self, and only in professional musicians. The results confirmed our hypothesis. Higher discrepancies between actual and future self-representations were positively associated with higher performance anxiety levels via the musical self only in participants who play instruments at a professional level. Furthermore, musical self influenced performance anxiety levels in a music related setting (i.e., a concert) but not in a non musical one (i.e., an exam).

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APA

Castiglione, C., Rampullo, A., & Cardullo, S. (2018). Self representations and music performance anxiety: A study with professional and amateur musicians. Europe’s Journal of Psychology, 14(4), 792–805. https://doi.org/10.5964/ejop.v14i4.1554

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