NancyLebovitz comments on Open Thread September, Part 3 - Less Wrong
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Review of Choke: What the Secrets of the Brain Reveal About Getting it Right When You Have To
Interestingly, they claim that choking is due to poor use of working memory:
That is an interesting idea. But there are motor programs that don't use verbal working memory. Making conscious adjustments (different from how the program was practiced) could interfere, though.
I think physiological panic/fear has to be a large part of most choke experiences, distinct from any thoughts interfering w/ working memory.
I've also heard of people choking especially because they're worried that their social status may be threatened if they're too good or too bad at something. I don't know if that acts through a different mechanism; I'm just saying that such concerns seem especially distorting on performance.
I'd like to see someone compare college students' performance on important tests after, say, 0--3 drinks. If test anxiety hurts people's scores as much as it seems to, then perhaps cheap beer will be used as a nootropic.
(A quick check on Google Scholar doesn't show any studies that have been done on this, which isn't surprising.)
It might be worth checking, though it would surprise me if it works. I'm betting that if alcohol improves test performance, college students would have discovered it long ago.
Thanks for the link-- I didn't realize test anxiety was that common or that there were such effective methods of treating it.