Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Athletes spend years intensively training in the gym, on the slopes and at the rink.

  • But how much is a difference in performance all in the mind?

  • Researchers have studied the effectiveness of motor imagery techniques, where instead

  • of physical practice, athletes visualise their path to victory.

  • In one study, competitive skiers were broken up into three groups, dynamic imagery, static

  • imagery and a control group. The dynamic imagery group stood in their ski gear, on a ski slope,

  • while they imagined themselves completing a down-hill slalom course. The static imagery

  • group sat inside while they imagined completing the course. And the control group only stretched

  • and didn't use imagery at all. When all groups raced down the same course,

  • the dynamic imagery group had the fastest average time, followed by the static imagery

  • group and then the control group. The dynamic imagery group also reported higher confidence

  • in their performance. Mental practicerehearsing a motor skill

  • in your mindcan actually improve physical performance. Studies have shown that mental

  • practice can improve the accuracy of tennis serves and hockey shots. And the effectiveness

  • of motor imagery is improved if it's done in an environmental similar to the one you

  • compete in, like on a ski slope. So what's actually happening inside your brain?

  • Brain imaging studies show when you imagine a movement, the same areas of your brain are

  • triggered as when you actually perform that movement. For example, when people imagine

  • walking, their primary motor cortex lights up. This area usually generates neural impulses

  • that pass down the spinal cord and tell your legs to walk. The only difference with motor

  • imagery is that no movements actually occurit's all in the mind.

  • So this mental training is similar to physical training. By repeatedly activating the motor

  • networks for a movement without actually doing it, you can strengthen the communication between

  • neurons associated with that movement. This is the same way physical practice improves

  • performance. Athletes obviously need to train their bodies

  • with physical practice, but training their brains can improve the accuracy of their shots,

  • without them even lifting a finger. So what happens to athletes bodies when they

  • train and compete at altitude? Check out Untamed Science for a biological take on peak performance.

  • And subscribe to BrainCraft for a new video every other week.

Athletes spend years intensively training in the gym, on the slopes and at the rink.

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it