Abstract

Anticipation is a crucial perceptual-cognitive skill in fast-ball sports, and the effect of high anxiety on performance has attracted more attention from sports psychologists. Related studies mainly focus on the effect of anxiety on influencing processing efficiency and attentional control (top-down vs. bottom-up) during information processing in sport. Attentional Control Theory (ACT) has been supported by several studies. However, these studies have been criticized by the low ecological validity of task design, such as neglecting the dynamic process of anticipation, and inadequate performance analysis, such as analyzing response accuracy and time separately. Using temporal occlusion paradigm, we tested ACT in a dynamic anticipation process. Eighteen skilled and eighteen less-skilled table tennis players were required to anticipate the serves of opponents under dynamic task constraints (early vs. late occlusion) and anxiety conditions (high vs. low anxiety). High cognitive state anxiety decreased processing efficiency (response time/response accuracy) for both groups whereas performance effectiveness (response accuracy) did not differ. In addition, it negatively affected processing efficiency in early anticipation compared with late anticipation tasks, suggesting that high cognitive state anxiety may have a greater impact on top-down attentional control. Our findings provide support for ACT and show that anxiety impairs anticipation efficiency and performance, possibly due to an ineffectively attentional shift from external kinematic cues to internal long-term working memory. Findings also have implications for the adaptation of attentional strategies and anxiolytic training.

Highlights

  • The influence of anxiety on performance has attracted more attention from sports psychologists

  • Vater et al (2016) had a similar finding by using football decision-making tasks. They found that mental effort significantly increased under high-anxiety conditions. These findings suggest that anxiety elicits greater decrements in processing efficiency than performance effectiveness and provide solid support for Processing Efficiency Theory (PET)

  • The findings showed that high anxiety was most detrimental to processing contextual information only compared to performance in processing postural information only, suggesting that anxiety may have a greater impact on top-down attentional control

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Summary

Introduction

The influence of anxiety on performance has attracted more attention from sports psychologists. Researchers have tested assumptions on Processing Efficiency Theory (PET, Eysenck and Calvo, 1992) and Attentional Control Theory (ACT, Eysenck et al, 2007) to explore the effects of anxiety on information processing in the competitive sport context. As one kind of emotion, may arise in response to a competitive situation. Anxiety is a multidimensional concept in two ways. Like other emotions, anxiety has both a trait component and a state component. According to Cox (2012), “state anxiety is an immediate emotional state that is characterized by apprehension, fear, tension, and an increase in physiological arousal” Trait anxiety is a predisposition to perceive certain environmental situations as threatening and to respond to these situations with increased

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