Title: KIN 340
1KIN 340
- Attentional Focus or Concentration
2What is attention?
- Everyone knows what attention is. It is taking
possession by the mind, in clear and vivid form,
of one out of what seems several simultaneously
possible objects or trains of thought.
Focalization, concentration of consciousness, are
its essence. It implies withdrawal from some
things in order to deal effectively with others.
(James, W. (1890), The Principles of Psychology)
3Modern Definition of Attention
- Engagement in the perceptual, cognitive and motor
activities associated with performing skills - Motor activities can be performed consciously or
non-consciously
4Selective Attention
- Definition
- Selecting certain information for processing and
ignoring other information - Describe the cocktail party phenomenon
- Ability to attend to one message in the midst of
many other competing messages - Ability to attend to one message and then
suddenly be distracted by another message to
which we were not specifically attending.
5Selective Attention (cont.)
- What do we tend to focus on?
- Unexpected stimuli
- Visual stimuli
- Most meaningful when we have a choice
- Allocate attention to sources we have been
instructed to, which we might not have otherwise
(e.g., BB plays, Pitch, Soccer feet or person?)
6Selective Attention (cont.)
- As we learn skills, we select the most relevant
features for successful performance of the skill
7Instruction and Attention
- Attending to relevant cues in midst of many
competing cues - Learn to ignore non-relevant cues
- Best to direct attention to relevant cues
- Attend to skill success
- Learner will attend to cues most meaningful or
pertinent to him/her - Learn which cues are not important
- Necessary to rehabilitation when person used to
do task without conscious attention
8Instruction and Attention (cont.)
- Distractions can and do occur but can be overcome
- Distractions occur when they are meaningful
- Reinforce meaningful cues of task to overcome
this - Be confident you are attending to the pertinent
cues
9Nideffers Dimensions of Attentional Styles
- Directions of Attention (1st Dimension)
- Internal
- Attending to his/her own thoughts and feelings,
physiological cues - External
- Attending to things going on in environment
- Occurs at a more reflexive level
10Nideffers Dimensions of Attentional Styles
- Width of Attention (2nd Dimension)
- Broad
- Attending to several different cues
- Narrow
- Attending to one or two cues
11Nideffers Attentional Styles (cont.)
- Shift from one attentional focus to another
- Narrow to broad
- Broad to narrow
- Internal to external
- External to internal
- Attention and concentration in sport must be
adjustable, like a zoom lens on a camera
12Nideffers Attentional Styles (cont.)
- Four basic types of attention
- Broad - external
- Broad - internal
- Narrow - external
- Narrow - internal
13Nideffers Attentional Styles (cont.)
- As a general rule, the more complex and rapidly
changing the situation, the more externally
focused your attention must be. - Also, the more need there is for analysis and
planning, the more internally focused your
attention must be.
14Nideffers Attentional Styles (cont.)
External
Blocks out distractions, crowd noises or internal
thoughts (bowlers and golfers)
Aware of everything going on around
them (quarterback scanning the field during a
play)
Broad
Narrow
Able to focus on a single thing ( weightlifting,
distance running)
Analytical athlete, flexible and
adjusting (coaches)
Internal
15Nideffer Attentional ErrorsTypes of Athletes
and the Errors Committed
External
- Forgets to think - Too involved with audience -
Overinvolved with info
- Errors of underinclusion - Cant adjust to
changing situation
Broad
Narrow
- Overanalyzes - In their headsfocus on the
past - Thinks about too many things at once
- - Chokers
- Focuses on self-defeating thoughts
- Become too focused on own feelings
Internal
16Attentional Problems
- Internal Distractors
- attending to past and future events
- overanalyzing body mechanics
- fatigue
- External Distractors
- visual and auditory distractors (crowd noise,
lighting, parents) - gamesmanship (trash talking, stalling)
17Effect of Arousal and Stresson Attention
- Inability to shift from one type of attention to
another. - Attention narrows and performer eliminates
important cues - Attention becomes more internally focused on
self-defeating thoughts. This is commonly known
as choking.