Abstract
Skilled athletes often maintain that overthinking disrupts performance of their motor skills. Here, we examined whether these experiences have a basis in verbal overshadowing, a phenomenon in which describing memories for ineffable perceptual experiences disrupts later retention. After learning a unique golf-putting task, golfers of low and intermediate skill either described their actions in detail or performed an irrelevant verbal task. They then performed the putting task again. Strikingly, describing their putting experience significantly impaired higher skill golfers’ ability to reachieve the putting criterion, compared with higher skill golfers who performed the irrelevant verbal activity. Verbalization had no such effect, however, for lower skill golfers. These findings establish that the effects of overthinking extend beyond dual-task interference and may sometimes reflect impacts on long-term memory. We propose that these effects are mediated by competition between procedural and declarative memory, as suggested by recent work in cognitive neuroscience.
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We dedicate this article in memory of our friend and colleague Steve Keele, who advised on this project, and whose kindness and good spirit will be sorely missed.
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Flegal, K.E., Anderson, M.C. Overthinking skilled motor performance: Or why those who teach can’t do. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review 15, 927–932 (2008). https://doi.org/10.3758/PBR.15.5.927
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/PBR.15.5.927