| Literature DB >> 21833271 |
Jared M Porter1, Russell P Nolan, Erik J Ostrowski, Gabriele Wulf.
Abstract
The primary purpose of this study was to investigate if focusing attention externally produced faster movement times compared to instructions that focused attention internally or a control set of instructions that did not explicitly focus attention when performing an agility task. A second purpose of the study was to measure participants' focus of attention during practice by use of a questionnaire. Participants (N = 20) completed 15 trials of an agility "L" run following instructions designed to induce an external (EXT), internal (INT) attentional focus or a control (CON) set of instructions inducing no specific focus of attention. Analysis revealed when participants followed the EXT instructions they had significantly faster movement times compared to when they followed the INT and CON set of instructions; consistent with previous research the INT and CON movement times were not significantly different from each other. Qualitative data showed when participants were in the external condition they focused externally 67% of the time. When they were in the internal condition they focused internally 76% of the time, and when they were in the control condition they did not use an internal or external focus of attention 77% of the time. Qualitative data also revealed participants in the EXT, INT, and CON conditions switched their focus of attention at a frequency of 27, 35, and 51% respectively.Entities:
Keywords: directions; practice; skill assessment
Year: 2010 PMID: 21833271 PMCID: PMC3153821 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2010.00216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Agility “L” test. Participant begins at start line beside cone A. Run toward cone B, pivot around cone B and run toward cone C. Run around cone C and run back toward cone B. Pivot around cone B and run across finish line.
Figure 2Agility run times for the external (EXT), internal (INT), and control (CON) conditions.
Figure 3In-depth breakdown of questionnaire response categories. Each number represents the total number of questionnaire responses in each of the broad and subcategories for each experimental condition. The total number of responses in each subcategory equals the number listed in its corresponding broad category. Within the “Other” category the subcategory of “Time” includes the number responses that suggested the participant focused on cues related to their movement time. The subcategory of “Mixed” includes responses that included a mixture of internal and external focus.