Ironic processes of concentration and suppression under pressure: A study on rifle shooting in Norwegian elite biathletes

Author:

Bartura Khelifa1ORCID,Abrahamsen Frank Eirik12ORCID,Gustafsson Henrik13ORCID,Hatzigeorgiadis Antonis4ORCID,Gorgulu Recep5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sport and Social Sciences Norwegian School of Sport Sciences, NIH Oslo Norway

2. Faculty of Social and Health Sciences, Section for Sports and Physical Education lnland Norway University of Applied Sciences, HINN Lillehamar Norway

3. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Department of Educational Studies – Sport Sciences Karlstad University Karlstad Sweden

4. Department of Physical Education and Sport Science University of Thessaly Trikala Greece

5. Psychology of Elite Performance Laboratory (PePLaB), Faculty of Sport Sciences Bursa Uludag University Bursa Turkey

Abstract

AbstractIn rifle shooting, suppressing unwanted thoughts can backfire in one's performance, causing athletes to behave contrary to their desired intention and further deteriorate their performance.PurposeThis study examined how priming attentional and negative cues affected participants' shooting performances toward ironic error targets under cognitive load conditions in Stroop task across two experiments.MethodsSemi‐elite biathletes (Experiment 1, n = 10; Experiment 2, n = 9) participated in the study. The study used a within‐subject quasi‐experimental design, particularly a one‐way repeated measures multivariate analysis of variance and a 2 × 2 fully repeated measures analysis of variance, to determine the participants' hit rates and shooting response times (RTs). In both experiments, the participants completed the reverse‐Stroop‐based target shooting performance under low‐ and high‐cognitive load conditions while receiving frequent priming attentional and negative cues.ResultsThe findings from Experiment 1 suggest that regulating repetitive priming attentional thoughts is efficacious in mitigating the likelihood of ironic performance errors and interference effects. The results of Experiment 2 show that repetitive priming negative cues resulted in negligible ironic error hit rates and slower RTs in target hits under high‐cognitive load conditions. The Bayesian analyses provided evidence supporting the null hypotheses.ConclusionTrying to control repetitive priming attentional and negative thoughts reduces ironic performance errors to a similar degree under cognitive load conditions among biathletes, regardless of interference effects. Further research is needed to determine the effectiveness of suppressing task‐relevant negative instructions in reducing the likelihood of ironic performance errors under pressure.

Funder

Norges Idrettshøgskole

Publisher

Wiley

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