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To err again is human: exploring a bidirectional relationship between pressure and performance failure feedback
Authors:David J. Harris  Samuel J. Vine  Michael W. Eysenck
Affiliation:1. College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK"ORCIDhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-3880-3856;2. College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK;3. Department of Psychology, Royal Holloway University of London, London, UK
Abstract:ABSTRACT

Background and Objectives: While the potentially negative effects of pressure on skilled performance have been well studied in laboratory-based research, theoretically driven questions based on real-world performance data are lacking.

Design: We aimed to test the predictions of the newly developed Attentional Control Theory: Sport (ACTS), using archived play-by-play data from the past seven seasons of the National Football League (American Football).

Methods: An additive scoring system was developed to characterize the degree of pressure on 212,356 individual offensive plays and a Bayesian regression model was used to test the relationship between performance, pressure and preceding negative outcomes, as outlined in ACTS.

Results: There was found to be a clear increase in the incidence of failures on high pressure plays (odds ratio?=?1.20), and on plays immediately following a previous play failure (odds ratio?=?1.09). Additionally, a combined interactive effect of previous failure and pressure indicated that the feedback effect of negative outcomes was greater when pressure was already high (odds ratio?=?1.10), in line with the predictions of ACTS.

Conclusions: These findings reveal the importance of exploring momentary changes in pressure in real-world sport settings, and the role of failure feedback in influencing the pressure-performance relationship.
Keywords:Anxiety  sport  choking  errors  clutch  dependence
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