2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.humov.2010.05.001
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How changing the focus of attention affects performance, kinematics, and electromyography in dart throwing

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Cited by 263 publications
(190 citation statements)
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“…Generally, the superiority of using instructions that elicit an external rather than internal focus is considered to be due to differences in the amount of cognitive control required to perform these two foci of attention. That is, an external focus is thought to be less working memorydemanding than an internal focus, hence allowing for more automatic and efficient motor control (Kal et al, 2013;Lohse, Sherwood, & Healy, 2010;Wulf, 2013). Accordingly, recent evidence suggests that an external focus may also enhance motor learning of children with intellectual disabilities (Chiviacowsky, Wulf, & Avila, 2013).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Generally, the superiority of using instructions that elicit an external rather than internal focus is considered to be due to differences in the amount of cognitive control required to perform these two foci of attention. That is, an external focus is thought to be less working memorydemanding than an internal focus, hence allowing for more automatic and efficient motor control (Kal et al, 2013;Lohse, Sherwood, & Healy, 2010;Wulf, 2013). Accordingly, recent evidence suggests that an external focus may also enhance motor learning of children with intellectual disabilities (Chiviacowsky, Wulf, & Avila, 2013).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The tasks in which the superiority of an external over an internal focus of attention has been shown range from balancing tasks (e.g., Wulf, McNevin, & Shea, 2001) to different aiming tasks such as golf (e.g., Wulf & Su, 2007), basketball shooting (e.g., Zachry, Wulf, Mercer, & Bezodis, 2005), or dart throwing (e.g., Lohse, Sherwood, & Healy, 2010) or also strength-endurance tasks as bicep curls (Vance, Wulf, Töllner, McNevin, & Mercer, 2004) or a wall-sit task (Lohse & Sherwood, 2011). Strikingly, sometimes only a single word was changed in the instructions, for example to exert force on the outer foot versus the outer wheel in the ski-simulator experiment (Wulf et al, 1998) or to concentrate on the tip of the fingers versus to concentrate on the rungs in a high-jumping experiment (Wulf, Dufek, Lozano, & Pettigrew, 2010).…”
Section: Attentional Focus Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In many studies, this is reflected in a lowered electromyographic (EMG) activity in the external focus conditions, which goes along with better performance (e.g., Lohse et al, 2010;Wulf et al, 2010;Zachry et al, 2005). A recent study showed reduced between-trial movement variability in the later phase of a golf putt in two different external focus conditions (on either the movement effect or on movement-irrelevant external stimuli) compared with a control condition (Land, Tenenbaum, Ward, & Marquardt, 2013).…”
Section: Movement Efficiency and Endurance Performancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interestingly, ball flight trajectories did not differ between the external focus group and a control group who did not receive any focus instruction. In dart throwing, it was shown that an external focus of attention increases the variability of the shoulder joint (Lohse, Sherwood, & Healy, 2010). Because throwing accuracy improved with an external focus, the increased joint variability was interpreted as a gain in functional variability (see also Lohse et al, 2013).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%