How to stay calm under pressure - Noa Kageyama and Pen-Pen Chen

7,632,397 views ・ 2018-05-21

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:06
Your favorite athlete closes in for a victorious win.
0
6825
3663
00:10
The crowd holds its breath,
1
10488
1808
00:12
and, at the crucial moment, she misses the shot.
2
12296
3359
00:15
That competitor just experienced the phenomenon known as "choking,"
3
15655
3806
00:19
where despite months, even years, of practice,
4
19461
2764
00:22
a person fails right when it matters most.
5
22225
2735
00:24
Choking is common in sports,
6
24960
1628
00:26
where performance often occurs under intense pressure
7
26588
3118
00:29
and depends on key moments.
8
29706
1860
00:31
And yet, performance anxiety also haunts public speakers,
9
31566
3970
00:35
contestants in spelling bees,
10
35536
1921
00:37
and even world-famous musicians.
11
37457
2291
00:39
Most people intuitively blame it on their nerves,
12
39748
3048
00:42
but why does being nervous undermine expert performance?
13
42796
4090
00:46
There are two sets of theories,
14
46886
1800
00:48
which both say that primarily, choking under pressure boils down to focus.
15
48686
5581
00:54
First, there are the distraction theories.
16
54267
2879
00:57
These suggest that performance suffers when the mind is preoccupied
17
57146
3590
01:00
with worries, doubts, or fears,
18
60736
2109
01:02
instead of focusing its attention on performing the task at hand.
19
62845
4830
01:07
When relevant and irrelevant thoughts compete for the same attention,
20
67675
3461
01:11
something has to give.
21
71136
2052
01:13
The brain can only process so much information at once.
22
73188
3498
01:16
Tasks that challenge working memory,
23
76686
2100
01:18
the mental “scratch pad” we use
24
78786
1890
01:20
to temporarily store phone numbers and grocery lists,
25
80676
3099
01:23
are especially vulnerable to pressure.
26
83775
3119
01:26
In a 2004 study, a group of university students
27
86894
3431
01:30
were asked to perform math problems,
28
90325
1893
01:32
some easy, others more complex and memory-intensive.
29
92218
3969
01:36
Half the students completed both problem types with nothing at stake,
30
96187
4450
01:40
while the others completed them when calm and under pressure.
31
100637
4348
01:44
While everyone did well on the easy problems,
32
104985
2540
01:47
those who were stressed performed worse
33
107525
2052
01:49
on the more difficult, memory-intensive tasks.
34
109577
2809
01:52
Explicit monitoring theories make up the second group of explanations
35
112386
4050
01:56
for choking under pressure.
36
116436
1680
01:58
They’re concerned with how pressure
37
118116
1355
01:59
can cause people to overanalyze the task at hand.
38
119471
3705
02:03
Here, the logic goes that once a skill becomes automatic,
39
123176
3531
02:06
thinking about its precise mechanics interferes with your ability to do it.
40
126707
4634
02:11
Tasks we do unconsciously seem to be most vulnerable to this kind of choking.
41
131341
5314
02:16
A study on competitive golfers compared their performance
42
136655
3350
02:20
when instructed to simply focus on putting as accurately as possible,
43
140005
3931
02:23
versus when they were primed to be acutely aware
44
143936
2941
02:26
of the mechanics of their putting stroke.
45
146877
2449
02:29
Golfers usually perform this action subconsciously,
46
149326
3141
02:32
so those who suddenly tuned in to the precise details of their own moves
47
152467
4080
02:36
also became worse at making accurate shots.
48
156547
3365
02:39
Choking may not be inevitable for everyone though.
49
159912
2875
02:42
Research suggests that some are more susceptible than others,
50
162787
3379
02:46
especially those who are self-conscious,
51
166166
2000
02:48
anxious,
52
168166
1055
02:49
and afraid of being judged negatively by others.
53
169221
2871
02:52
So, how can we avoid choking when it really counts?
54
172092
3294
02:55
First, it helps to practice under stressful conditions.
55
175386
3541
02:58
In a study on expert dart players,
56
178927
2211
03:01
researchers found that those who hadn’t practiced under stress
57
181138
3619
03:04
performed worse when anxious,
58
184757
1937
03:06
compared to those who had become accustomed to pressure.
59
186694
3452
03:10
Secondly, many performers extol the virtues of a pre-performance routine,
60
190146
4971
03:15
whether it’s taking a few deep breaths,
61
195117
2389
03:17
repeating a cue word,
62
197506
1550
03:19
or doing a rhythmic sequence of movements.
63
199056
2740
03:21
Studies on golfing, bowling, and water polo
64
201796
2762
03:24
find that short rituals can lead to more consistent
65
204558
3327
03:27
and accurate performance under pressure.
66
207885
2332
03:30
And thirdly, researchers have shown
67
210217
1781
03:31
that having an external focus on the ultimate goal
68
211998
3228
03:35
works better than an internal focus,
69
215226
2310
03:37
where someone is tuned into the mechanics of what they’re doing.
70
217536
3629
03:41
A study of experienced golfers revealed that those who hit chip shots
71
221165
3761
03:44
while focused on the flight of the ball
72
224926
2111
03:47
performed significantly better than those who focused on the motion of their arms.
73
227037
4419
03:51
So, perhaps we can modify that age-old saying:
74
231456
3131
03:54
practice,
75
234587
830
03:55
under pressure,
76
235417
1009
03:56
with focus,
77
236426
1362
03:57
and with that glorious end goal in sight,
78
237788
2421
04:00
makes perfect.
79
240209
1538
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7