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Journal Article

Citation

Maâmouri L, Jeddi R, Brisswalter J, Legros P. Percept. Mot. Skills 2007; 105(1): 227-235.

Affiliation

Laboratoire d'Analyse de la Performance Motrice Humaine, Université de Poitiers, Tunisie. maamouri.leila@voila.fr

Copyright

(Copyright © 2007, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

17918569

Abstract

This work examines the effects of sex and culture on physical self-perceptions. The aim was to compare the perception of physical fitness of French and Tunisian men and women. 400 individuals ages 20 to 35 years assessed their own fitness, endurance, strength, flexibility, body composition, and health according to specific category scales by completing a questionnaire. In general, the Tunisian group rated themselves higher than the French group. It appears that perceived physical fitness was related mainly to perceived endurance for both groups. Some disparities were observed between the two nationalities. Analysis showed an interaction between sex and culture (French vs Tunisian). For French men and women and Tunisian men, perceived physical fitness was more associated with perceived endurance, whereas for Tunisian women, perceived physical fitness was more strongly associated with flexibility. These data show that self-perception of physical fitness is a dimension which varies between individuals from different cultures.


Language: en

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