Neuroscientists Discovered a Mental Trick to Help You Stay Calm Under Pressure
For fans, such epic fails can be incomprehensible, but science actually has a pretty good handle on how choking happens. Not only that, but a new suggests a simple way that you can reduce your chances of blowing it in high-pressure situations.
First, some background on how scientists think about choking. has shown that monetary incentives can improve performance. Thats our intuitive understanding: People will work harder (and perform better) when theres money on the line. And the more money at stake, the better theyll perform.
But thats only true to a certain point-and thats where we get to choking under pressure. Because have also found that very high rewards actually have detrimental effects on performance; essentially, those outsize incentives negatively impact emotional and cognitive control, and even influence fine motor control and coordination.
A recent examined this connection and found it was especially true for people who were most loss averse. Most people dont want to lose what they already have-thats being loss averse-but in experiments, participants who were particularly skittish about giving up their winnings tending to choke more often.
Researchers also found that as the stakes were raised, activity in a certain part of the participants brains, the ventral striatum, increased. Once the task began, though, ventral striatum activity dropped among the highly loss averse participants-there was also less communication between the ventral striatum and areas of the brain that control motor function. As that communication dropped, performance suffered and choking became more common.
All of which suggests a potent connection between psychological state and physical performance. And which brings us, finally, to the newest research. In the latest , researchers took all of that accumulated knowledge about choking and asked what would happen if people mentally reframed their incentives.
The trick goes something like this: Instead of playing to win money, participants were asked to pretend they were playing not to lose money theyd already won. This wasnt strictly true, but they found it dramatically reduced choking. Essentially, the players had tricked their brains into staying more calm under pressure. (Researchers also found less perspiration on the players fingers, another sign that theyd reduced their stress.)
Its not clear yet how well this technique might transfer to other situations, but the results suggest suggest a new way to tackle the problem of choking. Next time you find yourself in a high-stakes situation, instead of trying to distract yourself or visualize yourself winning, just pretend youve already won.