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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average effect sizes than motor or strength tasks and that published studies had larger average effect sizes than unpublished studies.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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Comparative Study of the Effects of Mental, Physical and Combined Exercises on the Reactions of Students with Visual Impairments

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of mental and physical exercises on the reaction of the students with visual impairments was compared to those with no visual impairment, and the results indicated the significant superiority of mental exercise techniques (24.1±7.7) relative to physical exercise (30.2±9.5) and combined exercise (28.6±8.9).
Journal ArticleDOI

The improvement effect of limited mental practice in individuals with poststroke hemiparesis: the influence of mental imagery and mental concentration.

TL;DR: It is suggested that limited mental practice for individuals with poststroke hemiparesis may not improve motor performance, however, a higher degree of concentration during mental practice may improveMotor performance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Still searching for effective criticism inoculation procedures: An example of the value of replication and process analyses in applied sport psychology research

TL;DR: In this article, the authors replicated and extended some aspects of the research reported by Kirschenbaum et al. (1984) in which subjects were trained in techniques designed to prevent adverse effects of excessive criticism (Criticism Inoculation Training or CIT).

Working Memory and the Control of Attention in Sport: From General Mechanisms to Individual Differences

Philip Furley
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the theoretical framework of working memory as it relates to the control of attention in sport and concluded that working memory capacity is an important individual difference variable that is predictive of controlling attention in a goal-directed manner and avoiding distraction and interference.
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