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Sometimes, athletes should 'do' instead of 'think'
Health News Feature

Health News Feature
Weekly news feature articles on current health topics that affect you and your family.

Sometimes, athletes should 'do' instead of 'think'

Over-analysis of performance can lead to 'choking,' experts say

(HealthDay News) – Some athletes seem always to come through when the pressure is highest.

Who can forget Michael Jordan's game-winning basket against the Utah Jazz to win the 1998 NBA championship for the Chicago Bulls?

Or Derek Jeter's famous "flip" to nail the Oakland Athletics' Jeremy Giambi in the 2001 American League playoffs between the New York Yankees and the Athletics?

Yet, there are many athletes who possess similar skills who seem never to be able to make the big play or to perform well when the pressure is on. In sports, it's called "choking," and researchers have discovered that people are most vulnerable when they begin obsessing about their actions, not when they're distracted.

"If you are in a high-performance situation, the worst thing you could do is to try to think too closely about how you are performing," said Sian Beilock, an assistant professor in the psychology department at the University of Chicago , who co-authored a study of sports performance under pressure when she was a graduate student researcher at Michigan State University .

The risks of obsession are highest if you always perform the skill automatically, she said.

Failing under pressure is extremely common, especially in sports where "athletes only have a few seconds to perform their events," said JoAnn Dahlkoetter, a California sports psychologist, book author and former track star.

But while sports fans can reel off lists of times when professional athletes fell apart on the field, not every instance of failure means that someone has choked, said Curt L. Lox, professor of kinesiology and health education at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville.

"If Michael Jordan shoots a last-second shot for his team 10 times, he will miss approximately half of those. Do we say he choked in those instances? No. The game is tough, and players misfire regularly," he said.

But those who never perform well under pressure must be treated by an expert coach or sports psychologist, Lox said.

While scientists have studied how people learn skills and become experts, there isn't much research into why some fail in moments of pressure, said Beilock. So, researchers enlisted 54 students to see if they could provoke choking and study how it occurs.

The students, all novice golfers, were divided into three groups and given lessons in putting. Each group, however, was taught in a slightly different way.

One group was distracted throughout training. The subjects had to listen to a tape of a series of words and pick out a "target" word each time they heard it. The second group was put under pressure by being videotaped and told the tapes would be viewed by golf professionals. The third group learned how to putt in a normal environment.

After the subjects practiced about 300 putts each, researchers monitored them in a high-pressure situation. They were told that each of them and a partner would win a small cash award if both improved their putting performance.

The findings of the study were published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General , published by the America Psychological Association in December 2001.

The groups trained in a normal setting and a videotaped setting both performed at a lower level under pressure. In other words, they choked.

The group that trained while being distracted improved and appeared to have been "inoculated" against pressure, Beilock said.

"The bottom line of our study is that [for] high-level athletics -- where skills become automatic with practice and people aren't attending to the step-by-step performance -- a pressure situation may prompt you to think too much about what you're doing. You may break down the skills, slow it down and bring yourself to a lower performance level."

Whether they're trying to sink a putt or striding onto a stage to deliver a speech, people facing pressure should try to distract themselves so they don't think too much about automatic actions, Beilock said.

"Sing a song or have some kind of key word that prevents you from starting to think about the skill in ways you wouldn't normally do," she said.

Cox agreed that a certain amount of "reprogramming" is necessary. In some cases, sports psychologists help athletes visualize performing properly and not choking in a pressure situation. "We would also use positive self-talk to keep the athlete in a positive state of mind. Thus, instead of 'Don't miss this shot,' the focus might be, 'You've hit this shot 1,000 times.'"

On the Web

Worried about poor sports performance? Check the suggestions in this article from Sports Illustrated for Women.

SOURCES: Sian Beilock, Ph.D., assistant professor, Department of Psychology, University of Chicago ; Curt L. Lox, Ph.D., professor, department of kinesiology and health education, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville; JoAnn Dahlkoetter, Ph.D., sports psychologist and author, Your Performing Edge .
Author: Randy Dotinga, HealthDay Reporter
Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews, LLC . All rights reserved.

 

 
 
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