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MS Paint Art - July 2009

Why we choke under pressure

July 31st 2009 01:23
choking pressure golf
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From: Los Angeles Times



Perhaps it was golfer Tom Watson's desire to become the oldest person to win a major golf tournament that led to his poor putt on the 18th green and ultimate loss in the British Open a few weeks ago.


A new study in the journal Psychological Science shows that certain processes take place in the brain when a person is performing for a high reward and that those processes can have a detrimental effect on performance.

The study, published today by British researchers, used functional MRI brain scans to examine people while they played a computerized game for a modest monetary reward. Nineteen subjects played the games in which they had to catch a "high-payoff prey" or "low-payoff prey." They performed worse when trying to catch the high-payoff prey. Brain scans showed increased activity in the ventral mid-brain, an area linked to motivation and reward response.

"[H]ighly skilled players sometimes perform catastrophically when on the brink of victory," the authors wrote. "Often called 'choking under pressure,' this phenomenon extends beyond sport." Examples include students taking academic tests and tasks that are performed in front of an audience.

This study suggests that it's the presence of an incentive or reward that causes people to choke and that they might perform better if they didn't care as much. The intense desire to perform well causes an excessive arousal and activity in the brain that actually could interfere with decision-making, memory and attention.


The researchers note, however, that many variables are linked to choking under pressure. Anxiety, for example, can impair performance. But the fact that subjects in this study performed worse on a computer game in which the reward was relatively modest suggests that being over-motivated can be a stumbling block.

-- Shari Roan





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Brain Game

July 31st 2009 01:14
brain game
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focus with your eye

concentrate with your brain

use your imagination

to play the game again

keep your eye on it silly

and just what does this suggest to YOU

Comgratulations buddy, you've used a neuron or two.














brain game
puzzle








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computer art
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From: Atlanta Health link below



WEDNESDAY, July 29 (HealthDay News) -- Amyloid protein deposits in the brain play a role in disrupting the memory formation process long before a person shows symptoms of the memory impairment of Alzheimer's disease, a new study contends.

Previous research had suggested that clumps of amyloid protein, which damage neurons and are characteristic of Alzheimer's disease, begin appearing many years before Alzheimer's symptoms appear. But the link between the deposits and memory impairment had not been clearly demonstrated in humans.

In the new study, which appears in the July 30 issue of Neuron, U.S. researchers used medical imaging to examine the brains of older people who did not have significant memory impairment.

"Two recent advances in neuroimaging now allow us to explore the early, asymptomatic phase of [Alzheimer's disease], the ability to measure amyloid distribution in living humans and the identification of sensitive markers of brain dysfunction" in the disease, Dr. Reisa Sperling, of the Center for Alzheimer's Research and Treatment at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston and lead author of the study, said in a news release from the journal's publisher.

The researchers found that a number of study participants had amyloid deposits and abnormal activity in areas of the brain believed to be involved in memory function.

The results could help in efforts to find ways to predict and treat cognitive decline in people at risk for Alzheimer's, the study authors noted.

"Longitudinal studies are certainly needed, but our findings are consistent with the premise that cognitively intact older individuals with amyloid pathology may already be in the early stages of [Alzheimer's disease]," Sperling said. "The combination of molecular and functional imaging techniques may prove useful in monitoring disease progression prior to significant clinical symptoms, as well as the response to amyloid



link to the article from Atlanta Health





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