scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Attentional focus and motor learning: a review of 15 years

TLDR
This article provided a comprehensive review of the literature on the attentional focus effect and found that the performance and learning advantages through instructions or feedback inducing an external focus extend across different types of tasks, skill levels, and age groups.
Abstract
Over the past 15 years, research on focus of attention has consistently demonstrated that an external focus (i.e., on the movement effect) enhances motor performance and learning relative to an internal focus (i.e., on body movements). This article provides a comprehensive review of the extant literature. Findings show that the performance and learning advantages through instructions or feedback inducing an external focus extend across different types of tasks, skill levels, and age groups. Benefits are seen in movement effectiveness (e.g., accuracy, consistency, balance) as well as efficiency (e.g., muscular activity, force production, cardiovascular responses). Methodological issues that have arisen in the literature are discussed. Finally, our current understanding of the underlying mechanisms of the attentional focus effect is outlined, and directions for future research are suggested.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Optimizing performance through intrinsic motivation and attention for learning: The OPTIMAL theory of motor learning

TL;DR: The OPTIMAL (Optimizing Performance through Intrinsic Motivation and Attention for Learning) theory of motor learning is proposed, suggesting that motivational and attentional factors contribute to performance and learning by strengthening the coupling of goals to actions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neuroplasticity following anterior cruciate ligament injury: a framework for visual-motor training approaches in rehabilitation.

TL;DR: This commentary establishes a link between dynamic movement mechanics, neurocognition, and visual processing regarding anterior cruciate ligament injury adaptations and injury risk and can capitalize on this integration of sciences to utilize visual-training technologies and techniques to improve on already-established neuromuscular training methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Central Nervous System Adaptation After Ligamentous Injury: a Summary of Theories, Evidence, and Clinical Interpretation

TL;DR: This review provides a comprehensive and succinct overview of the neurophysiologic techniques utilized in assessing central nervous system function after ligamentous injury, a summary of the findings of previous investigations utilizing these techniques, and direction for further application of these techniques in the prevention and rehabilitation of joint injury.
Journal ArticleDOI

The interaction between cognition and motor control: A theoretical framework for dual-task interference effects on posture, gait initiation, gait and turning

TL;DR: This work reviews the main dual-task theories proposed to date and considers cognitive-motor dual-tasks in which the motor task is a less frequently studied transition movement (such as gait initiation or turning), rather than only the often-studied gait and posture tasks.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Perception and Action Planning

TL;DR: In this paper, a common coding approach for the understanding of functional relationships between perception and action is discussed, and evidence from two types of induction tasks is reviewed: sensorimotor synchronisation and spatial compatibility tasks.
Journal ArticleDOI

What do people think they're doing? Action identification and human behavior.

TL;DR: Action identification theory as discussed by the authors proposes that any action can be identified in many ways, ranging from low-level identities that specify how the action is performed to high level identities that signify why or with what effect it is performed, and the level of identification most likely to be adopted by an actor is determined by processes reflecting a trade-off between concerns for comprehen- sive action understanding and effective action maintenance.
Journal ArticleDOI

The automaticity of complex motor skill learning as a function of attentional focus

TL;DR: The present experiment was designed to test the predictions of the constrained-action hypothesis, which proposes that when performers utilize an internal focus of attention they may actually constrain or interfere with automatic control processes that would normally regulate the movement, whereas an external focus of Attention allows the motor system to more naturally self-organize.
Related Papers (5)