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Social Psychology of Doping in Sport: A Mixed Studies Narrative Synthesis

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The article was published on 2016-11-30 and is currently open access. It has received 52 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Social psychology (sociology) & Narrative.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Brain Rules

TL;DR: Angiotensin II induces endoplasmatic reticulum stress in brain regions that promote arterial hypertension.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sport supplement use predicts doping attitudes and likelihood via sport supplement beliefs

TL;DR: It is suggested that sport supplement users, who strongly believe that sport supplements are effective, are more likely to dope and targeting an athlete’s beliefs about sport supplements may improve the effectiveness of anti-doping prevention programmes.
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Tackling doping in sport: a call to take action on the dopogenic environment.

TL;DR: This report highlighted that many obesity risk factors emerge from multiple contexts and interact to place individuals at risk.
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Doping Prevalence in Competitive Sport: Evidence Synthesis with "Best Practice" Recommendations and Reporting Guidelines from the WADA Working Group on Doping Prevalence

TL;DR: A subject-wide systematic review of evidence on doping prevalence from published scientific papers is presented in this article. But, the focus of this review was on the reporting accuracy and data quality as evidence for doping behavior to facilitate future systematic reviews and establish recommendations for reporting future research on doping behavior in competitive sports.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of the athletes' entourage on attitudes to doping.

TL;DR: Overall, coaches and peers having a close and trusty relationship with the athletes were considered most influential with respect to doping-related decisions, and an anti-doping culture in the athletes’ environment was considered central to anAnti-Doping stance.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The theory of planned behavior

TL;DR: Ajzen, 1985, 1987, this article reviewed the theory of planned behavior and some unresolved issues and concluded that the theory is well supported by empirical evidence and that intention to perform behaviors of different kinds can be predicted with high accuracy from attitudes toward the behavior, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control; and these intentions, together with perceptions of behavioral control, account for considerable variance in actual behavior.
Book

Understanding Attitudes and Predicting Social Behavior

TL;DR: In this paper, the author explains "theory and reasoned action" model and then applies the model to various cases in attitude courses, such as self-defense and self-care.
Book ChapterDOI

From Intentions to Actions: A Theory of Planned Behavior

Icek Ajzen
TL;DR: There appears to be general agreement among social psychologists that most human behavior is goal-directed (e. g., Heider, 1958 ; Lewin, 1951), and human social behavior can best be described as following along lines of more or less well-formulated plans.
Book

Acts of meaning

TL;DR: Jerome Bruner argues that the cognitive revolution has led psychology away from the deeper objective of understanding mind as a creator of meanings, and only by breaking out of the limitations imposed by a computational model of mind can be grasped.
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