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PsycNET®


  • PsycARTICLES:
  • Citation and Abstract
On the fragility of skilled performance: What governs choking under pressure?.
Beilock, Sian L.; Carr, Thomas H.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General. Vol 130(4), Dec 2001, 701-725.
Experiments 1-2 examined generic knowledge and episodic memories of putting in novice and expert golfers. Impoverished episodic recollection of specific putts among experts indicated that skilled putting is encoded in a procedural form that supports performance without the need for step-by-step attentional control. According to explicit monitoring theories of choking, such proceduralization makes putting vulnerable to decrements under pressure. Experiments 3-4 examined choking and the ability of training conditions to ameliorate it in putting and a nonproceduralized alphabet arithmetic skill analogous to mental arithmetic. Choking occurred in putting but not alphabet arithmetic. In putting, choking was unchanged by dual-task training but eliminated by self-consciousness training. These findings support explicit monitoring theories of choking and the popular but infrequently tested belief that attending to proceduralized skills hurts performance. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2008 APA, all rights reserved)
  • Digital Object Identifier:
  • 10.1037/0096-3445.130.4.701
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