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Gepubliceerd in: Psychological Research 5/2014

01-09-2014 | Original Article

Practice with anxiety improves performance, but only when anxious: evidence for the specificity of practice hypothesis

Auteurs: Gavin P. Lawrence, Victoria E. Cassell, Stuart Beattie, Tim Woodman, Michael A. Khan, Lew Hardy, Vicky M. Gottwald

Gepubliceerd in: Psychological Research | Uitgave 5/2014

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Abstract

We investigated for the first time whether the principles of specificity could be extended to the psychological construct of anxiety and whether any benefits of practicing with anxiety are dependent on the amount of exposure and timing of that exposure in relation to where in learning the exposure occurs. In Experiment 1, novices practiced a discrete golf-putting task in one of four groups: all practice trials under anxiety (anxiety), non-anxiety (control), or a combination of these two (i.e., the first half of practice under anxiety before changing to non-anxiety conditions, anxiety-control, or the reverse of this, control-anxiety). Following acquisition, all groups were transferred to an anxiety condition. Results revealed a significant acquisition-to-transfer decrement in performance between acquisition and transfer for the control group only. In Experiment 2, novices practiced a complex rock climbing task in one of the four groups detailed above, before being transferred to both a high-anxiety condition and a low-anxiety condition (the ordering of these was counterbalanced across participants). Performance in anxiety transfer was greater following practice with anxiety compared to practice without anxiety. However, these benefits were influenced by the timing of anxiety exposure since performance was greatest when exposure to anxiety occurred in the latter half of acquisition. In the low-anxiety transfer test, performance was lowest for those who had practiced with anxiety only, thus providing support for the specificity of practice hypothesis. Results demonstrate that the specificity of learning principle can be extended to include the psychological construct of anxiety. Furthermore, the specificity advantage appears dependent on its timing in the learning process.
Voetnoten
1
This amount of putting trials was chosen on the basis that pilot studies in the same laboratory had revealed performance asymptote with this amount of practice. Furthermore, Beilock and Carr (2001) have demonstrated performance that is asymptotic in nature following a total of 270 trials from 9 different putting locations (i.e., 30 trials from each); the present experiment contained only one putting location resulting in a less complex learning task.
 
2
30 GBP is equivalent to 60.06 USD; 0.10 GBP is equivalent to 0.20 USD (exchange rates taken from the interbank rate on the last day of data collection (20.03.08).
 
3
The reduction in the potential prize was in line with the reduction in the number of trials where anxiety was present (i.e., 300 for the anxiety condition and 150 for the anxiety control condition). Thus, a single putt in either of the anxiety conditions had the same loss associated with an unsuccessful performance.
 
4
The results referred to centre around the findings of the MRE variable. Given the observations of previous pioneering research that have adopted golf putting tasks to investigate stress and performance (Mullen, Hardy & Tatersall, 2005; Mullen, Hardy, & Tattersall, 2005), it is not unusual to observe null effects between groups in the dichotomous variable of NSP. For this reason the outcome performance dependent variables of the present experiment were both dichotomous (NSP) and continuous (MRE) in nature. Since performance was the primary objective of the present investigation, the inclusion of a continuous variable was essential to measure performance in objective detail. This is especially important given that participants were explicitly aware that the task only afforded a single putt and that performance was measured on both the number of successful putts and the distance the ball finished from the hole on unsuccessful putts.
 
5
Strictly speaking. UK technical climbing grades are open ended, but typically start at 4 are subdivided into “a”, “b”, and “c” and progressively increase in difficultly up to 8c.
 
6
Since the instructions given to participants were to climb as quickly and as fluently as possible, good performance would be indicative of lower traverse times and fewer movements (the latter is particularly true for both the number of explored and number of ventured movements that are indicative of uncertain movements) (See Pijpers et al., 2005).
 
7
In order to ensure the reliability of both the performance measure and judges competency at using it, we conducted inter-judge reliability at each trial block for each performance dependent variable. For the time of traverse the mean R 2 for the 12 trial blocks (10 acquisition and 2 transfer) was 0.95 (SD ± 0.04), whereas the mean R 2 was 0.85 (SD ± 0.05), .89 (SD ± 0.03) and .89 (SD ± 0.06) for the number of performed, number of explored and number of ventured movements, respectively.
 
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Metagegevens
Titel
Practice with anxiety improves performance, but only when anxious: evidence for the specificity of practice hypothesis
Auteurs
Gavin P. Lawrence
Victoria E. Cassell
Stuart Beattie
Tim Woodman
Michael A. Khan
Lew Hardy
Vicky M. Gottwald
Publicatiedatum
01-09-2014
Uitgeverij
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Gepubliceerd in
Psychological Research / Uitgave 5/2014
Print ISSN: 0340-0727
Elektronisch ISSN: 1430-2772
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00426-013-0521-9

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