Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
928377 Human Movement Science 2012 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

Multiple lines of evidence indicate that the control of attention and motor skill performance are related. Athletes of various skill levels differ in terms of their control over the focus of attention and directing athletes to adopt an internal or external focus of attention modulates performance. However, it is unclear (a) whether the relationship between skill level and attentional control arises from preexisting individual differences in attention or from practice of the motor skill and (b) whether the effect of adopting an internal or external focus of attention on motor performance is influenced by individual differences in attention. To address these issues, individuals were measured on three distinct attention functions – orienting, alerting, and executive – prior to engaging in a novel golf-putting task performed with either external or internal focus instructions. The results indicated that, on average, attentional functioning and putting performance were related but that the strong relationships with orienting and executive attention were only present in the group given external focus instructions. These findings suggest that individual differences in attentional abilities are predictive of novel skill performance under an external focus of attention and they shed light on the mechanisms underlying the effects of focus instructions during motor performance.

► Measured attention before novel golf putt task under internal or external focus. ► Volitional orienting, alerting, and executive attention networks were measured. ► Overall, putting correlated with orienting and was predicted by all measures. ► Attention measures were related to putting only for external focus groups. ► Suggests prior attention ability and skill focus contribute to motor performance.

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