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Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of mental practice on motor skill learning and performance: A meta-analysis.

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TLDR
This article conducted a more comprehensive review of existing research using the meta-analytic strategy proposed by Glass (1977) and found that mental practice prior to performing a motor skill can enhance one's subsequent performance.
Abstract
A longstanding research question in the sport psychology literature has been whether a given amount of mental practice prior to performing a motor skill will enhance one's subsequent performance. The research literature, however, has not provided any clear-cut answers to this question and this has prompted the present, more comprehensive review of existing research using the meta-analytic strategy proposed by Glass (1977). From the 60 studies yielding 146 effect sizes the overall average effect size was .48, which suggests, as did Richardson (1967a), that mentally practicing a motor skill influences performance somewhat better than no practice at all. Effect sizes were also compared on a number of variables thought to moderate the effects of mental practice. Results from these comparisons indicated that studies employing cognitive tasks had larger average effect sizes than motor or strength tasks and that published studies had larger average effect sizes than unpublished studies. These findings are discus...

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Dissertation

The application of imagery to enhance 'flow state' in dancers

Eun Hee Jeong
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated imagery to enhance flow in dancers and developed an imagery intervention and tested its efficacy in terms of flow, anxiety, and performance in Study 3, and two studies (Study 1 and 2) were conducted examining flow and imagery.
Journal ArticleDOI

Planning-related motor processes underlie mental practice and imitation learning.

TL;DR: It is found that responses were impaired for those body parts that were concurrently used in mental practice, suggesting a binding of body-part-specific motor processes to action plans.
Journal ArticleDOI

Motor effort training with low exercise intensity improves muscle strength and descending command in aging.

TL;DR: The results suggest that high mental effort training combined with low-intensity physical exercise is an effective method for voluntary muscle strengthening and this approach is especially beneficial for those who are physically weak and have difficulty undergoing conventional strength training.

Current status of robotic stroke rehabilitation and opportunities for a cyber-physically assisted upper limb stroke rehabilitation

TL;DR: There are strong evidences that the efficacy of robotics-assisted rehabilitation can be increased by motivation and engagement, and by exploiting the opportunities offered by cyber-physical systems and gamification, a signifi-cant improvement of context sensitive engagement can be realized.
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