| Literature DB >> 28286760 |
Giacomo Rossettini1, Marco Testa1, Marco Vicentini2, Paolo Manganotti3.
Abstract
External focus of attention (EFA) and internal focus of attention (IFA) represent commonly used strategies to instruct subjects during exercise. Several studies showed EFA to be more effective than IFA to improve motor performance and learning. To date the role of these strategies on motor performance during finger movement was less studied. The objective of the study was to investigate motor performance, patient's preference induced by IFA and EFA, and the focus during control condition. Ten healthy right-handed participants performed a finger movement task in control, EFA, and IFA conditions (counterbalanced). Errors, patient's preference, and type of attentional focus spontaneously adopted during the control condition were recorded. EFA determined less error (p < 0.01) compared to control and IFA. Participants preferred EFA against IFA and control condition. In the control group 10% of subjects adopted a purely EFA, 70% of subjects adopted a purely IFA, and 20% of subjects adopted a mixture of the two foci. Our results confirm that EFA is more effective than IFA and control in finger movement task. Due its clinical relevance, the interaction between attention and finger movement should be further investigated.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28286760 PMCID: PMC5329693 DOI: 10.1155/2017/2946465
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Experimental procedure. Note that participants performed a motor task with right hand under different attentional conditions. They started without any attentive instruction (control). Subsequently they executed the task under external focus of attention/internal focus of attention in a counterbalanced way. EFA is external focus of attention; IFA is internal focus of attention.
Figure 2Outcome: motor performance data. Note that the plot displays the motor performance outcomes under different attentional conditions. External focus of attention exhibits a significant lower number of errors (p < 0.01). Not significant differences were found between control and internal focus conditions. EFA is external focus of attention; IFA is internal focus of attention.
Attentional focus under the neutral, control condition. Note that the table reports a detailed explanation of attentional focus adopted by subjects during the neutral, control condition. EFA is external focus of attention; IFA is internal focus of attention.
| Subject | “What's your focus during the control condition?” | Code |
|---|---|---|
| (1) | “…I was thinking to my fingers…” | IFA |
| (2) | “…Sometimes I focused to my fingers, sometimes to the sequence of keys…” | IFA/EFA |
| (3) | “…I was thinking to the motion of my fingers…” | IFA |
| (4) | “…I reflected to my hand…” | IFA |
| (5) | “…I started to focus on the movement of my fingers, but afterwards I focused to the keys…” | IFA/EFA |
| (6) | “…I considered the motion of my fingers…” | IFA |
| (7) | “…I was focusing to my fingers…” | IFA |
| (8) | “…I was thinking to the sequence of keys…” | EFA |
| (9) | “…The movement of the fingers captures my attention…” | IFA |
| (10) | “…I was focusing to the motion of my fingers…” | IFA |