Motor performance as a function of audience affability and metaknowledge

J Law, R Masters, SR Bray… - Journal of Sport and …, 2003 - journals.humankinetics.com
J Law, R Masters, SR Bray, F Eves, I Bardswell
Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology, 2003journals.humankinetics.com
Butler and Baumeister (1998) suggested that performance decrement of a difficult skill-
based task occurring only in the presence of a supportive audience could be explained by “a
cautious performance style”(p. 1226). A potential alternative explanation stems from
Masters'(1992) contention that skill failure under pressure occurs when performers attempt
to control motor performance using explicit knowledge. It was proposed that a skill acquired
with minimal metaknowledge (ie, a limited explicit knowledge base) would remain robust …
Butler and Baumeister (1998) suggested that performance decrement of a difficult skill-based task occurring only in the presence of a supportive audience could be explained by “a cautious performance style” (p. 1226). A potential alternative explanation stems from Masters’ (1992) contention that skill failure under pressure occurs when performers attempt to control motor performance using explicit knowledge. It was proposed that a skill acquired with minimal metaknowledge (i.e., a limited explicit knowledge base) would remain robust regardless of audience type. To test this hypothesis, a table tennis shot was learned with either a greater or a lesser bank of explicit task knowledge. Performance was subsequently assessed in the presence of observation-only audiences, supportive audiences, and adversarial audiences. Consistent with hypotheses, supportive audiences induced performance decrement in the explicit-learning group only. It was argued that supportive audiences engender higher levels of internally focused attention than do adversarial or observation-only audiences, increasing the chance of disruption to skill execution when performance characteristics involve a large amount of explicit processing.
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