Hidden Brain - You 2.0: Overcoming Stage Fright
Episode Date: August 22, 2022The pressure. The expectations. The anxiety. If there’s one thing that many of us have in common, it’s the stress that can come from performing in front of others. In this week’s episode, we rev...isit our 2021 conversation with cognitive scientist Sian Beilock about why so many of us crumble under pressure — and what we can do about it. Don't forget to check out the other episodes in our You 2.0 series, including last week's show about how we can harness our sight to achieve our goals. Also, if you'd like to support our work, you can do so at support.hiddenbrain.org. Thanks!
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
During the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, the women's 100 meter freestyle race had a favorite, Australia's Kate Campbell.
The swimmer had won two bronze medals at the 2008 Olympics and a gold medal at the 2012 Games.
One month before Rio, she broke the world record in the 100 meter freestyle.
After that race, she confessed.
She didn't really know how she did it.
I think the best things you've done for Memphis.
I don't remember a whole lot of it.
I just remember getting on the blocks and things like stealing good stuff.
Once you got a good style, it's all downhill from there.
So I think that's pretty much what I did.
And then came Rio.
Dave and I are going to... because that's pretty much what I did. And then came Rio.
At first, it looked like she was going to win. Hey, it started was a little bit slower than everybody else.
The point eight of a second was the reaction time.
Once she hit the water, look at the world record line
on her waist, a great first 50, 24.77.
Kate had a commanding lead, but after the 50 meter turn,
something happened.
Her lead began to evaporate.
Oh, look, there's quite a few lining up now.
This is not clear, Kavadol.
And it's going to be made.
In the finals print, other swimmers
edge past her.
She ended up in sixth place.
Wow, what a shocking result!
Later she said the world got to witness possibly the greatest choke in Olympic history.
It turned out, Kate thought she had flinged before the starting gun. It all started.
As she hit the water, she was certain she was going to be disqualified.
Her race plan went out the window.
She panicked.
She swam the first 25 meters too fast and then ran out of gas on the home stretch. The
versions of Kid Story play out all the time for elite athletes across a range of sports.
The pressure, the nerves, they can get to even the very best of the best.
Yeah, I mean it's a little counterintuitive, right? You want to perform at your best.
You know how to do it and you have shown that so many times before.
And then all of a sudden, you just can to do it and you have shown that so many times before. And then all of a sudden,
you just can't pull it off.
This week on Hidden Brain, in the latest in our YouTube.io series, we look at why we choke,
how pressure can hijack our bodies and our brains, and how to keep it from derailing us.
All of us have been there, taking the SAT, trying out for the football team, reciting
our wedding vows.
We all know what it's like to feel hundreds of eyes on us, the pressure,
the expectations, the anxiety. Psychologists, Cian Bailock has spent decades studying why many of us
crumble under pressure and what we can do about it. Cian Bailock, welcome to Hidden Brain.
Oh, thanks for having me. Cian, you've accomplished a great deal in your life.
Besides Stellar career as a psychologist, you've also been a prominent administrator.
You're currently the president of Barnard College in New York City.
But I'd like to take you back to a more humbling moment in your life, if I might.
You were in high school and you were a soccer goalie on the California State team.
And you were playing a game.
Things were going really well until you noticed someone standing right behind you.
What happened next?
Yeah, I noticed that the national coach, the person that starts selecting for the Olympic team and playing at that national world stage was standing right behind me and all of a sudden I remember that my whole mentality changed. I sort of became
hyper aware of everything I was doing and that someone was watching me. I almost was watching
myself through his eyes. And I ended up really bobbling the next ball that came to me and
then eventually I let in an easy shot that I should have been able to block in my sleep.
It was almost as if it was in slow motion
and I just missed, I dove over the ball
rather than at the ball.
It was almost like getting the ball shot through your legs
when you're playing on the field.
And the coach walked away, I watched him walk away
and I just thought that's it.
My soccer career is never gonna be the same
and I just couldn that's it. You know, my soccer career is never going to be the same. And I just couldn't understand it.
Like, this is something I did all the time.
You know, I was a really great player.
I practiced so much.
Like, why did this change now when he was there?
Like, I just, I was confused and mad and sad.
Yeah.
So we're going to explore and depth
what happens inside the brain when we choke and what we can do about it.
But I want to begin by clearly laying out the range of ways we can crumble and distress, what sports fans and researchers call choking under pressure.
You once experienced this in the academic domain during a chemistry test you took in your freshman year of college.
Can you tell me what happens here?
in your freshman year of college. Can you tell me what happens here?
Yeah, I choked a lot.
I never tested as well as I did in practice.
And this certainly happened when I got to college.
I went to the University of California at San Diego.
I was focused on getting a bachelor's of science
majoring in a STEM field.
And when I went in to take intro to chemistry, which
is a very hard class, at least at what it is for most
people.
And the professor looked around at the 600 person class and said, a lot of you aren't going
to pass this class.
I thought, oh my god, I'm in that back for sure.
Like there's no way.
So I paid attention in class.
I thought I had studied really diligently for the first test.
I took the first test.
I walked out, and I remember walking behind a group
of students, and they were talking about the answers.
And my answer, I remember thinking,
gosh, my answers weren't like their answers.
So that was my first cue.
Always a bad sign.
It was a bad sign.
So then he posted, it wasn't like now,
where you probably get your scores all online.
But he posted in like, on one of those yellow,
legal pieces of paper outside the front door.
I think maybe even written in hand.
And there were, but at this point,
maybe 400 kids in the class.
And I got the worst grade out of anyone in the class.
I mean, it's really embarrassing.
There were a lot of people tied with me, but there was no one below me.
And I remember calling my mom and walking back and saying, a lot of people tied with me, but there was no one below me.
And I remember calling my mom and walking back and saying, I can't do college, I'm not
good enough.
You know, both the domains in which we've talked about, you know, playing, you know, high
stress, you know, soccer game and doing a chemistry test, you know, high stress, you know, soccer game, and doing a chemistry test.
You know, you could argue that the tasks involved are actually fairly complex and complicated,
but sometimes we can choke even when it comes to doing something simple if the stakes are
high enough.
In 2009, US Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts was swearing in President-Elect
Barack Obama.
Now, both men had spent years in the public eye dealing with difficult and stressful situations.
The exact words of the oath of office were not a surprise.
They were familiar to both men.
But here's what happened during the swearing and ceremony.
I Barack Hussein Obama.
I Barack Hussein Obama.
I Barack Hussein Obama.
Do solemnly swear.
That I will execute the office of president to the United States faithfully.
And I will execute the office of president of the United States faithfully.
Can you talk a moment, Sihan, about how sometimes the simplest tasks can trip us up when we're under pressure?
Yeah, I think this is why choking is so interesting because it can happen in any sort of situation
where we feel pressure to perform well.
Something oftentimes that's so well learned that you would be surprised that anything
would go wrong.
The swearing in is a great example of that where maybe the chief just just started paying
a little bit too much attention to what he was saying.
Just the act of doing that can be really disruptive.
One that I like to talk about a lot is parallel parking,
which I'm very good at when no one is in the car with me,
but when someone is watching, I choke.
It's really embarrassing.
You know what I'm believes me,
but I'm a really good parallel parker
till I'm under stress.
It's like one of those philosophical conundrums, right?
How do we know you're a good parallel parker?
If you're never a good parallel parker,
when we can see.
Exactly.
It's all about the tree and the forest.
Or even one, I think that's really relevant right now
as we come back into social situations
is just like interacting with other people.
Like, how many times at a party
have you tried to introduce yourself
and you kind of choke getting the words out
or asking someone tells you their name
and you have no idea, even as they're saying it,
what it is.
Like, we choke in the simplest situations.
Yeah, and I want to bring up another example
because it's along the lines of what you were just talking about.
There are times when we are doing things
that we have done hundreds of times
before or thousands of times before, and we still can trip up. I'm thinking of US Army
Buickler Keith Clark who performed taps at President John of Kennedy's funeral at Arlington National
Cemetery in November 1963. He'd obviously played it many times before, but something happened when he got to the sixth note.
Now you know people later said that the mistake sounded like the bugle was weeping,
but Keith Clark himself never got over making this mistake.
I suspect that he felt a lot like you felt as you saw the national team coach, you know,
walking away from that field.
Yeah, I mean, it can be just so devastating to do something that you know how to do and
do it not at your level of
ability when all eyes are on you. And this is what makes it so mysterious, isn't it?
Because when we are going through one of these things, you know, you feel like
telling everyone, I really can do it. Believe me, I know how to do this. Yeah, I
mean, it's a little counterintuitive, right? You want to perform at your best and
you can't, right? It's one thing if you don't care, but choking occurs when you feel the most pressure, you
feel everyone's eyes on you, you want to put your best foot forward, you know how to do
it, and you have shown that so many times before.
And then all of a sudden, you just can't pull it off.
There are endless examples of professional tennis players and golfers, flubbing simple
shots when the pressure is on.
Cian soccer story speaks to that.
Or take free throws in basketball.
So many close games are decided in the final minutes
by a player sinking or missing free throws.
Right now he's got to go one for two for a tie.
You can't describe the pressure here.
I mean, I think free throw shooting is such an interesting aspect of all of my research
and it's like, I think, the epitome of a choke situation.
Oh, he missed it!
Objectively, shooting a free throw is not that hard of a task compared to what basketball
players do.
It's the same spot.
No one is guarding them.
They know how to do it. But what
really changes is the psychological element of it.
Two shots here. And that was woefully off the line. But you see how he pulled back Jim.
He's missed his last two. He is not staying with the shot. As I said, there's a lot of
difference making him when you're up by 20. He keeps it a one possession game. How big is that?
But sports also shows us another domain of choking, where the choke isn't over in just a moment,
where you let in a goal, but the choke sort of builds on itself. It becomes bigger and bigger.
In your book, choke, you tell the story of the French golfer Jean Van Develle at the
British Open in 1999. What happened to him, Sia?
He got to that 18th hole. He was just ready to win.
He's three shots ahead, so he can afford to take a six
and still win double-bowgain, still, then it should five over.
But you could see, right, when he got to the 18th hole,
everything looked a little different.
He sat over the ball before he took his first drive,
and it did not go well.
Oh!
I don't believe this.
His first shot on the 18th hole, landed on the fairway
of the 17th hole.
The second off the grandstand, the third into the water.
Look, what is going on here.
And you can see the picture that was across newspapers the next day. He took off his socks and shoes and waited into the water. And you can see the picture that was across newspapers the next day. He took
off his socks and shoes and waited into the water and was actually going to try and hit
the ball out of the water. Now I don't know. We've put many of us have tried these kind
of shots, but he's got a sink deeper and deeper. It's all silty down here and I don't
think he's. And he thankfully decided not to do that, took the penalty,
ended up in a tiebreaker round and lost.
This is so, so, so, so sad.
But he just crumbled.
Not only did his shot start going awry,
but you kind of felt like it was building on each other.
You had the sense that it was not going in a good direction,
and it's just heartbreaking.
His golfing brain stopped about 10 minutes ago, I think.
Yeah, I don't know if you feel the same way as you are, but whenever I see something like
this on television or I hear something, I feel terrible.
It's like, I feel like, oh my god, I just want this to end.
Please fix the problem.
And do you feel that way that in some ways you're with them in this moment of excruciating
agony? Oh, I feel're with them in this moment of excruciating agony?
Oh, I feel it with them right there.
In a way though, I've learned not only to feel the excruciating pain,
but I kind of look at it as a scientist,
I'm really interested in what's gonna happen next.
Yeah.
And I think that's actually one of the reasons
we love watching sports, right?
We know that people come into professional games often
or amateur games with high skill levels,
but you never quite know what's gonna happen
when it mistakes are highest.
I mean, if you just knew how people were gonna play
based on their past records, why would you watch, right?
But what's so interesting is that at those highest levels,
there's a mental aspect that you just don't know
how it's gonna play out.
Who's gonna choke? Who's to thrive? Can someone recover?
And it's just so fascinating from a human perspective.
The thrill of victory and the agony of defeat.
I want to talk about a slightly different element of choking.
Sometimes when we choke, it can produce breakdowns in communication.
For example, in medicine or surgery, or when a team is working on something complex,
can you talk about this that sometimes choking is not just about what happens to you,
but what happens to you as a member of a team in terms of your interactions with other people on the team?
Yeah, I mean, I think this is a really interesting aspect of choking.
Choking can be very individual, but we often don't work as individuals.
You know, often we're working as teams, and one thing that my research and others have shown
is that one of the key places that there are performance breakdowns
when they're stressful situations, time demands, or there's life or death situations
is that people stop
communicating as well as they could. And this is really interesting because
doctors, for example, they don't communicate all the information to another
doctor as they hand off a patient, and then there's an issue, or pilots leave
something out, or even as you're working as a team on a group project, you fail
to communicate in a way
that's clear. And what I find so interesting about these situations is that we're often very
confident that we've communicated what we need to communicate because we know what it is in our head.
But our ability to accurately gauge whether or not someone else understood it is what gets diminished.
whether or not someone else understood it is what gets diminished.
We often think that people who fail at important tasks are people who don't care, or people who are simply unprepared for the big moment.
When we come back, how choking is often not the product of carelessness and inexperience,
but the consequence of expertise and caring too much.
You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Even the most experienced and skilled musicians, athletes and doctors can sometimes lose it.
They crumble unexpectedly and find themselves bewildered at what happened.
They know how to do something really well.
So why did their skills abandon them when it mattered most?
See on Bailauk has studied the psychology of choking. She and other researchers have
discovered that there is a complex psychology behind this all-too-common experience. In
her book, she explores the role of what cognitive scientists call working memory in the phenomenon
of choking.
I mean, I think about our working memory as like our cognitive horse power, right?
It allows us to get lots of things done.
Juggle numbers in our head, plan for the future, make decisions based on a lot of different
information.
And the thing that is so important to remember about working memory is that it's limited.
We only have so much of it, which is why, for example, it's not a good idea to drive
and talk on the cell phone because then part of your working memory is devoted to reacting
to what's happening on the road, and another part of it is devoted to the cell phone conversation,
and that's not great.
Psychologists have come up with a number of ways to identify and test working memory.
Can you tell me how they do this, Siyeon?
Yeah, well, it's really getting you to work
as you're thinking about something.
So maybe I'll read you a list of digits
and you have to repeat them back to me just as I read them.
So that's kind of how much you can hold.
But what if I read you a list of digits
and then you had to repeat them back in the reverse order?
Why?
That's a lot harder, right?
Because you have to hold all the digits,
then you have to start counting backwards
while still not getting rid of any of what you've held.
And that's really the working part of working memory.
Because working memory is finite, your brain has to quickly decide how to deploy it.
In a basketball game, your brain has to take in where your teammates are located, what
your opponents are doing.
It has to figure out how to respond to a new opportunity that suddenly develops.
One reason skilled players are better than novices is because they have seen similar situations on the court before.
So they don't expend a lot of working memory to process what is happening.
They can focus their working memory on the elements of the situation that are truly novel. Yeah, I mean, I think that's what really separates
those extraordinary performers from us regular ones.
Like a concert pianist is not thinking
about what their fingers are doing.
And because they don't have to think about that,
they can then interpret the melody
and think about how the tone is in particular situations
and have an impact with a piece that you or I
who's having to think about our fingers
would not be able to.
I'm wondering, Cion, if we can talk a moment about the paradox of working memory, because
of course, the picture that you're laying out suggests that having working memory is
very effective, that it helps us in all kinds of different domains.
And of course, on the face of it, that is true, but the answer is also more complicated.
Can you explain how?
Yeah, I mean, so here's really the kicker.
It's really important to be able to focus, but you have to be focusing on the right things.
And what often happens is that when we're performing skills
or activities where it's actually,
we've learned them to perfection
or learn them on autopilot,
it's better not to focus on all the details.
So sometimes our working memory
can actually get in the way.
And let me just give you an example.
Most of us who are fortunate enough could shuffle down the stairs really easily and not
give it a second thought.
We've learned walking motions and locomotion in a way that we just don't think about what
we're doing.
But if I ask you to pay attention to your knee and tell me what your knee is doing is your
shuffling down the stairs, there's a good chance you're going to fall down the stairs.
Because now I'm asking you to bring into conscious attention
something that normally runs outside it.
And you might in doing so, just take a little longer
and thinking how your knee is gonna be placed
and that's when you fall.
I'm wondering if this is what might explain why,
in many sports, the same thing that helps you in one domain
of the game can actually hurt you in another domain of the game.
Because actually our times when you should be focusing and should be concentrating and should be conscious The same thing that helps you in one domain of the game can actually hurt you in another domain of the game.
Because actually, our times when you should be focusing and should be concentrating and
should be conscious, and there are other times when, in fact, being conscious and deliberate
can hurt you.
Yeah, I mean, I think that's right.
And what I would even say is that, you know, there are certain things that you need to
be conscious and focusing on and certain things that you don't, even within the same activity.
So you'd want your basketball player certainly to be using working memory
to read the court, think about the next play going on,
how they're going to move after that play,
but you certainly wouldn't want the player at that point
to be thinking about how they're angling their wrist
as they go to take the shot,
because that's something they do so fluently.
It's actually going to slow them down
to have to think about it consciously
to use their working memory.
You write in the book that the key is to have brain power at your disposal, but be able
to turn it off when that brain power is a problem.
And I thought that was such an interesting idea that on the one hand, you want to have
the ability, you want to have the working memory, but you also want to, in some ways,
have it be like a faucet where you can turn it off and go back to autopilot.
I think that's right, and I think it gets back to this idea that more attention, concentrating more is not always helpful.
And I always cringe when I hear coaches yelling at kids from the side of the line, concentrate, concentrate.
I mean, it may be true for the kid on the soccer field who's watching the plane fly above them.
But oftentimes, you know, in that pressure situation,
you don't wanna encourage the players
to pay too much attention to things that they shouldn't.
Yeah.
So in some ways we can go back to your high school soccer game here.
You know, when you were thinking about what the coach
was thinking of you, in some ways
and you started to analyze your own behavior
and analyze your own performance,
you were watching yourself from outside yourself.
I mean, this is what you call paralysis by analysis.
It really is.
And I think when I did it at the time, I had this feeling of everything going in slow motion.
I was paying attention in a way I don't normally do.
And it wasn't until many years later, when I started researching this, where I realized
this is actually a common phenomenon in these high-stakes situations.
We care so much about what we're doing that we try and control it in order to ensure
an optimal performance.
And unfortunately, that control can backfire and actually disrupt our ability to play
fluently on autopilot to do the thing we've practiced so hard to do.
I want to talk about some research studies that you and others have conducted, where you can actually induce choking or something that looks like choking in people.
You've conducted studies where you ask college soccer players, for example,
to dribble a ball around cones while noticing with side of their feet
they are using to control the ball.
Tell me about the study and what you found.
Yeah, I've done a lot of studies designed
to try and make people perform worse.
But in this situation, we had soccer players
who were either new to soccer novices
or just very inexperienced, dribble around cones.
And we also had college-level players
or really expert players do the same thing.
And we told them both to pay attention
to the side of the foot that just touched the ball.
And what we found is that for the experts,
doing that actually slowed down their ability
to dribble through the cones accurately.
But for the novices, if anything, it helped a little bit.
And it goes back to this idea that,
for the most part when we're just learning a skill,
we do have to pay attention to it a lot.
But once we know it really well and it's on autopilot,
if you pay too much attention to aspects of it that you wouldn't normally focus on,
there's no soccer player in college soccer running down the field thinking about left,
right, left, right, that you actually disrupt it.
So this is the great paradox of working memory. It plays an essential role as we're learning a new skill. Being deliberate and conscious when you're a beginner is an excellent way
to master something. But as you get better and better, it becomes more and more automatic.
Instead of working memory, you now need to rely on something called procedural memory.
All the things you know how to do really well are saved in your brain in procedural memory.
If you take a skill that has been encoded in procedural memory
and start to think about it deliberately using working memory,
you go back to thinking like a beginner.
This is when you choke.
Yeah, I mean, I think one important take home is that we have different kinds of memory
or we talk about remembering in different ways.
And procedural memory characterizes more our memory for different procedures, right?
And so we don't think about every step as we get really good at it. We can do the whole procedure together.
We just sort of get at the end.
It's kind of like the route you take to go to work every day.
When we did, at one point, commute to work,
you don't think about every turn you make.
All of a sudden, you end up at work and you're there.
And that's sort of a procedure you have memorized to do something.
And it's the same in athletics as well as you get much better and better at doing a particular task.
The memory is, we talk about it as this procedural memory, it's sort of, you remember the procedures to do it and you can start at the beginning and end at the end.
You don't have to think about the steps in between.
Researchers have also found that when we are under pressure other cognitive
skills get disrupted. In one study scientists scan the brains of Cornell medical
students experiencing the stress of preparing for their board exams. The
students underperformed in a simple test of cognitive ability. The researchers
tracked what was happening inside their brains. And what they found is that you
know different areas of their brain were not communicating
as well with each other as they should.
It was almost as if being under that constant stress
had disrupted the fluent flow of information,
norally, and it led these students,
the ones who are getting ready for the boards
to be less creative, less able to think outside the box,
less able to solve outside the box, less able to solve
interesting problems. So much of what we're talking about, Cion, comes down to the role that
anxiety is playing in our lives. You once conducted a study into math anxiety and looked at the changes
happening in people's brains as they were about to embark on a math test.
Yeah, so we've done a lot of work lately
looking at math anxiety because unfortunately,
math anxiety is really prevalent.
And we've been really interested in where math anxiety
comes from and what's actually happening
when someone who's math anxious has to do math.
And our argument has been that it's not just that people
who are anxious about math are bad at it,
that something about the anxiety itself
changes how the brain functions.
And so we looked at that by inviting people
who are really worried about math
and people who weren't to our lab
to have their brain scanned using an MRI.
And what was so interesting about this study
and about using neuroscience technique here is that we could really separate out what was happening in the brain about being anxious from actually what was going on in the brain when they were doing the math.
And you can actually get a picture of which areas of the brain are changing when someone just knows they're about to do math versus when they're actually doing it. And so what we did is we told them they would get a cue, like maybe a yellow square and they knew the math was about to come
or they'd get another cue or red square
and they knew they were gonna do a reading task.
And what we found, which was really interesting,
was when the people who were really worried about math
just knew the math was coming,
areas of the brain involved in our neural pain matrix,
the same areas of the brain that are involved
when we pick our finger with a needle or stub our toe were activated. When they just knew the math was coming, they
weren't doing any math, they just knew it was coming. But even more interesting was that
when these areas of the brain were active, when they just knew the math was coming,
when they actually had to do the math, they did worse.
It's almost as if the pain is now sort of, or the anticipation of pain is sort of crowding
out their ability to actually focus on the problem.
So at some point now they're not actually looking at the math problem anymore because their
brain is so filled with the pain or the fear of the impending pain.
And that's really been our argument that people who are anxious about math are not anxious
because they're bad at it.
They're bad at math because they're anxious about it.
And that's a very, very different story
about how to help people get better at it.
These feelings of anxiety often come from a desire to do well.
The solution to choking cannot be to stop caring.
When we come back, techniques we can all learn to keep caring, but stop choking. You're listening to Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedanta.
Psychologist Cian Bylock has found that in high-stakes settings, many of us start to focus
on the wrong things.
Instead of simply executing what we know how to do, we second-guess ourselves and behave
in highly scripted and stilted ways.
Unsurprisingly, we make mistakes.
And when we do mess up, our mistakes can then make us even more anxious.
To choke might be human, but there are some people who perform remarkably well under pressure.
When the stakes are highest, they don't crumble. They actually seem to thrive.
Cion is performing well under pressure a matter of temperament or a skill
that we can all learn. Yeah well I've really fall strongly on the these are
skills that can be learned side. Of course there are many individual
differences across people and one is you know maybe how susceptible they are to
what other people think about them or how much they care about a particular
domain or area but I don't think there's very much evidence at all
that people are chokers or thrivers.
And I think anyone can learn to perform better
at what makes them most nervous when the pressure is on.
We talked earlier about that chemistry test in college
that you did really badly at.
You came in last in a class of 400.
After the test was over, you had a conversation with your mom
where you expressed to her concerns about
whether you were the right fit for college.
And she suggested a number of things to you
that turned out to actually be quite relevant
in actually turning you from a choker to a driver.
What was that conversation like and what did she tell you,
Sia?
Yeah, so I remember calling her as I was walking back
to my dorm after getting the score and, you know, I was just devastated
and I thought I'd done everything right.
But she asked just the right questions.
She said, did you study?
I said, of course I studied.
She said, did you do the practice problems in the book?
I said, no, I read it just read over the chapters.
Then she said, did you have a study group?
Did you see if you knew things was like other people knew them? I said, no, I just read over the chapters. And she said, did you have a study group? Did you see if you knew things with like other people
knew them?
I said, no, I just did it all by myself.
She said, did you go to office hours?
I said, no, no, I just read the book.
Like I did in high school, and I did really well in high school.
She said, well, maybe you just didn't study in the right way.
And I took her advice to hard.
I realized that I had to do something that I didn't like to do,
which were the practice problems, which were not fun.
And I found a study group,
which was helpful to understand what I knew
and what I didn't.
But when I really figured out how to do this
in the right way was that I would go to the study sessions
having already studied on my own and we'd quiz each other,
like trying to get to the answers as quickly as possible.
And it was like we were mimicking, taking the test in that group.
And that's when I really mastered the problems.
And it turns out that that's a really great technique to do well under pressure, is to
practice doing well under pressure.
And when we took the second test, I got the highest grade in the class.
Wow.
I understand you've helped your own children internalize the same lesson, that in other words,
you can actually try and mimic pressure situations before you're actually under pressure in
order to help you deal with the situation when it actually arises.
Yeah, I mean, I do this a lot with my 10-year-old in terms of if she has to give a presentation
in class, I make her give it to me, and sometimes I make funny comments, or I distract her a
little bit.
I get her used to what it's going to be like in class, and nothing's more pressure-filled
than having your mom embarrass and bother you.
So she's ready for it when she gets in front of the group.
So in some ways, it seems to me that this is in line
with the ideas around how to combat anxiety in general,
which is the exposure to the trigger,
the anxiety-inducing trigger,
is often the best way to reduce our responses to anxiety.
How much of this work is connected to the idea
of exposure therapy?
I think there's a common theme that runs right through it.
And the idea is that you have to close this gap between training and competition.
That's the sports analogy.
And you can take that to any skill that you do, any domain,
you want to get used to what it's going to be like in the real situation.
And so that means, for example, if your child is playing
high-level tennis, the first time to show up to watch them
is not at their big match.
They need to get used to you watching them
if you're going to show up at practice, right?
It means that if you're going to take an SAT or an ACT,
you've got to practice taking SATs and ACTs.
It means if you're going to speak in public,
you've got to practice speaking with other people
watching you. You have to get used to what in public, you've got to practice speaking with other people watching you.
You have to get used to what it feels like and get used to reminding yourself that those physiological responses are not a bad thing.
You talk about how there are ways to also reframe those physiological responses.
In other words, if you're experiencing sweaty palms or a Palpatating heart, the normal way to interpret those signals is to tell yourself, oh my god,
I am overmatched for the situation that I'm in. But there's a different way to also think about the very same symptoms.
Yeah, I mean, it's interesting to think about that we'd have the same symptoms whether we were
worried or excited, right? And that's really very
liberating because then it's about reinterpreting them.
And myself and other colleagues have done a lot of work
showing that when you can get people to reinterpret
those symptoms as a sign they're gonna thrive,
that beating heart is shunting blood to my brain
so I can think, rather than a sign they're gonna fail,
they actually perform better.
And we've shown this for students taking tests,
especially students who are really nervous and anxious about how they're going to do on the test.
We've shown that actually just getting them to reinterpret what their feeling leads to better
performance. Cion, you once won an award from the National Academy of Sciences and you had to
give a presentation of the academy. You were very tense about it.
Can you tell me how you employed some of these techniques to deal with your own anxiety?
Right, my family was there.
My mom had flown out from California.
It was like I knew people were watching online and I was like petrified.
My mom and dad used to come watch me talk when I was a young academic, and I hated it.
It was like, I was under so much stress.
I have to like physically turn away from my dad
because every like frown or, you know, any mouth move
and I was like, oh my god, I'm sounding like an idiot.
And oftentimes we actually see, ironically,
that like friendly faces having your family
and friends all there can create more pressure than if you didn't know anyone.
And so I reminded myself that my sweaty palms and beating heart were not a bad sign.
I also focused on something else which I think is really important is that actually reminding
yourself why you should succeed.
I know the material better than anyone else.
Even if everyone in that room is way smarter than me, I know my own material.
I'm the master of this.
And actually focusing on why you should succeed can lead to better performance.
See on another researchers have also identified other techniques to keep athletes and performers
in a state of flow where they are relying on their procedural memory rather than their working
memory to carry out tasks they have already mastered. One way to keep your working memory from
interfering is to give it unimportant things to do just to keep it occupied.
Well remember we talked about sometimes we perform poorly under stress,
so we start paying too much attention
to things that we shouldn't.
And one of the ways to stop ourselves
from paying attention is to do something else.
So counting backwards, singing a song,
focusing on one key thought
and golf people have a swing thought.
Or if you're giving a talk,
focusing on the three take-home points
you want people to get.
Anything that takes your mind off of over-analysing every aspect of what you're doing can be really
important.
Another technique is to focus on your breathing.
Breathing slowly and deeply can calm you down.
But focusing on your breath can also redirect your working memory to something other than what you are doing.
Yeah, I mean, the breathing is another, I think, really important technique.
It can take your mind off of what you're doing in a way that can be really good.
And it can also, again, as you said, calm down your whole body in a way that can be really important.
But I tend to think of breathing techniques as a great sort of crutch, just like singing a song or focusing on your pinky toe, anything to take
your mind off of what you shouldn't be focusing on in that moment.
Do you do this at all, Sian, in your own life? Do you actually try and sing a song in your
head or focus on your breathing before you give an important presentation?
I do. So I played lacrosse in college and I was center,
so I started the game with the draw,
and that was always really nerve-wracking,
and I sang Take It Easy by the Eagles.
Well, I'm running down the road, trying to loosen my load.
I tried not to do it out loud,
because people would look me weird.
And the song pops into my head now when I get nervous
in situations where I have to perform.
It comes in there automatically.
Take it easy. nervous in situations where I have to perform, it comes in there automatically. The next time I see you giving a public talk somewhere, I know what song is going through
your head right before the talk begins. Exactly.
Another thing I do right before a big event is I distract myself, which seems a little
bit counterintuitive, but I had argued that 10 minutes before is not the time to cram or
to think about exactly how you're going to shoot the shot.
It's to do something totally different.
And I know a lot of professional athletes do this, some listen to music, some do crossword
puzzles.
I like to read some people know, some like people magazine
online, something that just takes my mind off completely of where I'm going.
We've talked about how highly trained musicians and athletes can choke. One conclusion you might
draw from this is that practice and experience are not very useful in preventing choking.
That would be a mistake. I think practice is so important. Practice is really important for developing fluent
automated processes and what you're doing. And what the practice does often is allow
you not to have to focus on every step and every detail of what you're doing. And if you
can do that, when you're playing a game, for example, then you are more likely to perform
well. And ironically, you are more likely to perform well.
And ironically, you're less likely to remember what you just did.
I always make a joke that when athletes are interviewed after a great and fantastic game,
all they can do is think their moms.
They do that all the time because they don't remember what they did.
They don't know what to say.
I mean, I don't know what to say. I mean, I don't know what to say. And it's because they were performing so
automatically, it was actually almost outside of conscious awareness and when you
don't pay attention to something, you don't remember it. When you learn a skill
can also matter. Cion once conducted a study where she analyzed the age at which
golfer started to play the game. So my research and others have shown that when people learn actually really early, they
often are protected from choking in these sorts of especially motor skills.
It's almost as if they learn it differently, and they're less likely to flub when it matters
most.
What do you think is happening in the brain that causes this to happen?
We know that oftentimes when children learn activities, they learn them more in a more
automatic fashion.
They're not thinking about every step of what they're doing.
Think about how the kid learns a language, right?
It's just sort of seeping in.
And sometimes when you learn it in that way, you're sort of protected from
essentially being able to unpack it in a way that disrupts your performance.
I'm wondering, Sihan, if you can talk a moment about when you did badly on that
chemistry test in college, the thought that went through your mind was not, you
know, I prepared for this the wrong way. The thought that went through your mind
was, I'm an imposter here. I don't really belong in college.
And you have to wonder how often that's happening to other people,
people who feel like the pressure has gotten to them and they feel like they're
out of place in a situation.
Can we talk about the idea that choking can also be shaped by our families,
organizations and cultures? I mean, are there some environments that are more
likely to produce choking than others?
You know, I think this is really a great question because it hits on an important point that
even though we're talking a lot about what's happening inside our head,
what's happening inside our head is really affected by the environment that we're in.
Right? So if we walk into a situation and we feel like we shouldn't perform well
because we've been historically excluded or with the only woman in the room or people don't feel like we should do well.
That can have an impact on how we perform.
But if we walk into the same situation and feel like even if we don't do so well,
people know that we can learn and get better, that there are examples of people
not doing well in the past and being okay, that there is avenues for us to ask questions
and not be judged. It all of a sudden can change people's attitude about what they can do.
The environment has a big effect on how we feel about ourselves,
and in essence, then how likely we are to choke.
We interviewed Claude Steele on Hidden Brain some months ago, essence then how likely we are to choke.
We interviewed Claude Steele on Hidden Brain some months ago and a lot of his work focuses
on the idea of stereotype threat, which is that when you have stereotypes about you or
your group, in some ways you become more likely to prove those stereotypes true because
you're so worried about the stereotypes, so worried about showing that the stereotype
is true, that your performance ends up becoming impeded.
And in some ways, it's not quite choking, I suppose,
but it's sort of a related phenomenon.
Yeah, I mean, I've always argued to cloud
that stereotype threat is just a form of choking.
I think it is.
I don't know if he agrees with me,
but it is, in my mind, at least,
because the environment is essentially having an effect
on how you think about yourself in that moment.
You want to essentially live down some expectation
that someone else has.
You're worried about being evaluated
based on whatever group you come from.
And that can affect how you interpret the situation.
It can affect what you focus on
and can also affect how you interpret your bodily reactions, right?
If I have a sweaty palms and beating heart,
and I am excited to do something,
and I'm ready to go,
that will actually lead to better performance.
But if I have a sweaty palms and beating heart,
and I'm worried about confirming this stereotype,
my performance might actually get worse.
So I'm wondering how we should think about what individuals should do. So in other words,
I think one of the things that I was picking up as you were talking is that in some ways
the deck is stacked unfairly against some people. If you're a first-generation college student,
for example, you might be experiencing more pressure being in college than, you know,
if multiple members of your family
have been to college over several generations.
And so you're more likely to choke,
but it's clear that it's partly the result
of structural and environmental factors
of which you have no control.
But of course, we are relying on individuals
in some ways to address those problems
because we're locating the problem
of choking in individuals.
There is some tension there, is there not,
between sort of thinking about choking
as an individual phenomenon
and the problem of choking as a structural phenomenon.
Yeah, I mean, I think you're really right.
And I think it's an individual phenomenon
and how it's mostly been studied,
but it is also a structural phenomenon.
And there, in the example you gave,
I would argue that it is the organization's responsibility, the College of University, to recognize that that might be the case and
to start putting structures in place to help ensure that those students who come in say
first generation who might feel as if they shouldn't perform as well have supports so
that they can. At Barnard, we just started a whole new office and initiative called Access
Barnard. That is for first whole new office and initiative called Access Barnard, that is for first-generation low-income and international students designed to do exactly
what you're talking about, which is essentially take some of the extra cognitive load or burden,
I would argue that they shoulder about not necessarily being as familiar with American higher education.
And I would say that, you know, ability is way more widespread than
opportunity. And as we think about how to make sure that everyone without
ability is able to be at the table and thrive, we have to as organizational
leaders and as organizations think about the structures. It can't just be an
individual responsibility.
can't just be an individual responsibility.
I'm wondering, Sihan, if we can talk a moment about some of the work that's looked at
airline cockpits, for example,
compared to 50 or 60 years ago,
airline cockpits today are designed to assume
that pilots are gonna make mistakes.
And the goal of the cockpit is not to say,
unless you're perfect, something bad is gonna happen to you. the goal of the cockpit is not to say, unless you're perfect, something bad is going to happen to you.
The goal of the cockpit now is to say,
we know that things are going to fail from time to time.
We know that pilots are going to make mistakes.
The goal of the cockpit now is to minimize those mistakes.
And secondly, when the mistakes happen
to minimize the consequences of those mistakes,
is there a sort of societal implication
for this body of work, which is talking about the ways
in which we can generally reduce pressure overall?
Yeah, I mean, I love this line of thinking.
I mean, it's sort of like the goal of life
shouldn't be that we're not going to make mistakes.
It should be that we are going to make mistakes
and how do we recover, reduce the impact.
And I think that's true in so many situations.
So I think the cockpit is a great example.
I also think it's true in how people lead organizations.
So leaders, for example, talking about the mistakes
they've made, any way that sort of makes it okay
for people to make mistakes and learn and grow.
And what you wanna be talking about is how can you make it
so we're educating people about how to minimize
when an accident happens or minimize injury and how to learn from it and how to speak up and know that one mistake
is not the end of the world?
Do you think that as a society, we also glorify pressure to some extent, Cyan, that in some
ways we credit people who are able to do well under pressure as being exceptional.
I mean, there are clearly situations where you want people
who are very good at dealing with pressure.
If you're a firefighter, you definitely want firefighters
to be able to respond well under pressure
because presumably that's when the firefighters are doing
their most important work.
But there are many situations in life where I feel like we use
pressure to test people into professions.
And those professions actually don't call
for a lot of functioning under pressure,
which begs the question of why we're using
you know, pressure situations to evaluate people.
Yeah, I mean, I think it's a really fair point.
What I would argue is that we shouldn't be using
anyone situation to decide whether people succeed
or whether they can go on or whether they're fit for the job.
You know, in classrooms, many of our professors at Barnard have stepped away from just having
a midterm and a final to multiple assessments throughout the quarter or the semester.
It turns out that when you assess people multiple times, they actually learn more because taking
a test is also a place to learn what you know and what you don't know.
But it also gives a whole or picture,
and a more holistic picture.
And I think that's true across the board.
I mean, I think one reason that job interviews
or these assessment situations are just one shot,
is because it's easier to do it that way.
But the question is, does easier lead you
essentially to the best outcome?
And I think oftentimes the answer is no. [♪ Music playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, playing in background, the brain reveal about getting it right when you have to. See you on Bylock.
Thank you so much for joining me today on Hidden Brain.
Oh, it was so fun.
Thank you.
Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media.
Our audio production team includes Bridget McCarthy,
Annie Murphy-Paul, Laura Quarelle, Kristen Wong, Ryan Katz,
Autumn Barnes, and Andrew Chadwick.
Tara Boyle is our executive producer. I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor.
For today's Anson Quiro, we turn the mic over to you, our listeners, with a story from our show, My Anson Quiro.
Today's My Anson Quiro is brought to you by Anstar. Anstar
advisors are now with you everywhere on the app, in your car and at home.
Our story comes from 14-year-old Lila Hafa. For as long as she can remember,
Lila has struggled to express herself in writing. Her handwriting is
sometimes messy and disorganized and she used to have trouble holding a pen in she can remember, Lila has struggled to express herself in writing. Her handwriting is sometimes
messy and disorganized and she used to have trouble holding a pen in her first year in school.
Her teachers didn't seem to notice that anything was wrong, but that changed when she got to
third grade and she had a teacher named Valerie Homgren. I will never forget one day when I was having trouble doing an assignment.
I was starting to write in the middle of the page, not on the left hand side like I was supposed to.
My writing was sloppy and the words ran into each other and the lines ran into each other.
I went up to her to see if I could get some help on this.
So Miss Homegrown realized that there
was something going on and she said that I seemed to be spelling at a second grade level
because I was in third grade. I said that I felt more like I was spelling at a kindergarten
level. And I think that in that instance and in other instances that she realized that there was something more
going on than just the typical rating problems. Lila had some test done and she
was diagnosed with a learning disability called this graph here. Not long
after that she was in a meeting with her teachers, her parents and some special
led instructors to figure out what to do next. This was honestly quite terrifying because I was just a small child and all these people were
there gathered around me talking about me and it was pretty scary. We were all sitting around
a long table and Mrs. Holmgren pulled out a computer and opened it to Google Docs and said
that there was this cool thing that she wanted to show me. So she showed me how to
open speech to text and I did not quite understand what this was at first. Then
she showed me that you talked to the computer and it writes down what you're saying. This was just an overwhelming
moment for me because I realized all of the stories and the ideas that I had stuck in my head,
there was an easy way to get them down on the paper and to be able to share them with the world.
And I just threw my head back and said, I could write a thousand stories. It
was just an amazing moment. And my parents were there, the teachers were there. And everybody
seems to be thinking, yes, this is going to work. Like, we've made a difference.
I still use speech-detached daily.
I use it to send messages.
I use it to write essays in class.
I use it to type up emails.
And she uses it to write stories.
Like the one she wrote a few years ago in fourth grade.
I wrote a story called The Girl Who couldn't stop reading a K-A-A-Me and it was featured on a
podcast called Story Pirates where kids write shows and then they turn them into
radio plays so that was pretty cool.
If Mrs. Holmgren was standing in front her today, this is what Lila would say.
Thank you for noticing my potential and noticing that there was so much more to me and that it wasn't just the basic struggle that I was having.
Not only did you notice the handwriting and help me get better at that, but you knew that there was so much inside my head
that needed to get out.
And to this day, I continue to expand and to great stories
and just to get those things out of my head
using voice to text. This segment was brought to you by OnStar. OnStar believes everyone has the right to feel safe
everywhere. That's why their
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On your phone, in your car and at home. OnStar. Be safe out there.
If you're enjoying our YouTube.io series, please consider making a donation to support
our work. You can do so at support.hiddenbrain.org.
I'm Shankar Vedantam. See you soon.
you