120 male and 120 female athletes, who were aged 13 to 22 yr., from Junior and Senior High School and College varsity sports, and 60 male and 60 female nonathletes of like age, were tested on Oltman's portable rod-and-frame apparatus to assess field dependence. Analysis indicated that the boys were more field-independent than the girls. Female athletes were more field-independent than male nonathletes.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
BieriJ.BradburnW.GalinskyM. D.Sex differences in perceptual behavior. Journal of Personality, 1958, 26, 1–12.
2.
MaccobyE. E.The development of sex differences. Stanford, CA: Stanford Univer. Press, 1966.
3.
McLeodB.Field dependence as a factor in sports with preponderance of open or closed skills. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1985, 60, 369–370.
4.
PargmanD.Perceptual cognitive ability as a function of race, sex, and academic achievement in college athletics. Paper reported at Psychology of Sport and Motor Behavior II, Proceedings from NASPSPA, Penn State, May1985.
5.
PerneyV. H.Effects of race and sex on field dependence-independence in children. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1976, 42, 975–980.
6.
PetersonS. L.WeberJ. C.TrousdaleW. W.Personality traits of women in team sports vs. women in individual sports. Research Quarterly, 1967, 38, 686–690.
7.
ShermanJ. A.Problems of sex differences in space perception and aspects of intellectual functioning. Psychological Review, 1967, 290–299.
8.
SvinickiJ. G.BungardC. J.SchwensohnC. H.WestgorD. J.Physical activity and visual field dependency. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1974, 39, 1237–1238.
9.
VaughtG. M.Accounting for sex differences on the rod-and-frame test. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1971, 33, 1114.
10.
WitkinH. A.The nature and importance of individual differences in perception. Journal of Personality, 1949, 18, 145–170.