Mechanisms through which table tennis practice influences the development of big five personality traits in primary school students
Jian Wang, Yating Zou, Liping Du, Yang Chen, Guoyuan Huang

TL;DR
A 16-week table tennis program improved personality traits like openness and agreeableness in boys aged 9–10.
Contribution
This study provides causal evidence that systematic table tennis training can shape personality traits in children.
Findings
Systematic table tennis training significantly improved openness, agreeableness, and extraversion in primary school boys.
The training also reduced neuroticism, indicating improved emotional stability.
Conscientiousness was not significantly affected by the intervention.
Abstract
This quasi-experimental study examined the effects of a 16-week systematic table tennis training program on the Big Five personality traits of primary school students. Previous research has largely focused on the macro-level effects of physical activity, with limited fine-grained investigation into the psychological shaping mechanisms of specific sports, particularly intervention-based evidence involving children without prior training. A total of 98 male students aged 9–10 years were enrolled and, after propensity score matching (including age, baseline personality scores, etc.), were allocated to an experimental group (n = 49) or a control group (n = 49). The experimental group received moderate-intensity table tennis training three times per week (120 min per session), comprising technical drills, tactical exercises, and match simulations, while the control group maintained their…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSport Psychology and Performance · Personality Traits and Psychology · Sports Performance and Training
