4.4 Article

Is cognitive control of perception and action via attentional focus moderated by motor imagery?

期刊

BMC PSYCHOLOGY
卷 11, 期 1, 页码 -

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SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1186/s40359-023-01047-z

关键词

Kinesthetic motor imagery; Visual imagery; Internal focus; External focus; Air-pistol shooting

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This study investigated whether global motor imagery and its components moderate the effects of attentional focus on shooting performance. The results showed that attentional focus had significant effects on shooting performance, but global motor imagery and its components did not moderate these effects.
Motor imagery (MI) has emerged as an individual factor that may modulate the effects of attentional focus on motor skill performance. In this study, we investigated whether global MI, as well as its components (i.e., kinesthetic MI, internal visual MI, and external visual MI) moderate the effect of attentional focus on performance in a group of ninety-two young adult novice air-pistol shooters (age: M = 21.87, SD = 2.54). After completing the movement imagery questionnaire-3 (MIQ-3), participants were asked to complete a pistol shooting experiment in three different attentional focus conditions: (1) No focus instruction condition (control condition with no verbal instruction) (2) an internal focus instruction condition, and (3) an external focus condition. Shot accuracy, performance time, and aiming trace speed (i.e., stability of hold or weapon stability) were measured as the performance variables. Results revealed that shot accuracy was significantly poorer during internal relative to control focus condition. In addition, performance time was significantly higher during external relative to both control and internal condition. However, neither global MI, nor its subscales, moderated the effects of attentional focus on performance. This study supports the importance of attentional focus for perceptual and motor performance, yet global MI and its modalities/perspectives did not moderate pistol shooting performance. This study suggests that perception and action are cognitively controlled by attentional mechanisms, but not motor imagery. Future research with complementary assessment modalities is warranted to extend the present findings.

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