Quiet eye training
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Anybody familiar with this, or ever used it for climbing training? |
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I saw this NYT article recently. |
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This is going to be a little long winded, sorry. If there are folks who really know this stuff, PLEASE correct me. |
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JLP wrote:This sounds like academic overthinking focused on an effect as if it is a cause. Elite performers simply know from conditioning what to focus on and what to ignore and their eyes will follow that. I'd love to see one of these gadgets following the eyes of a stressed out 5.8 trad climber. Oh - what's my belayer doing, is my knot okay, what will that pitch 400 feet above be like - oh yeah, what about this next move... You can't simply tell this person what and what not to look at and expect this change in visual information alone to change their performance.Maybe not, but there are actual positive studies looking at this in other sports. Maybe the negative studies just aren't published, but I'm willing to give it a try. YMMV. I'm not an academic, so may not have done justice to the whole concept. |
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Reading this made me think back to Arno Ilgner's words about focus and attention in the Rock Warrior's Way. He writes about 'soft eye focus' or broad focus in contrast with narrow focus. The goal (he claims) is to use soft eye focus to achieve an overall awareness of what's around you instead of fixating on or over-thinking about specific features (holds, etc). I'll have to re-read those sections again to reconnect with what he was saying.. But you should definitely check out that book if you haven't already. It really revolutionized the way I thought about climbing. |
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Kenan wrote:Reading this made me think back to Arno Ilgner's words about focus and attention in the Rock Warrior's Way. He writes about 'soft eye focus' or broad focus in contrast with narrow focus. The goal (he claims) is to use soft eye focus to achieve an overall awareness of what's around you instead of fixating on or over-thinking about specific features (holds, etc). I'll have to re-read those sections again to reconnect with what he was saying.. But you should definitely check out that book if you haven't already. It really revolutionized the way I thought about climbing.I have read that book maybe 5-6 times recently. Very helpful. I like the soft eye concept but have struggled to incorporate it. There was a short section in the quiet eye book analyzing tactical gaze studies. One study looked at hockey players and found that elite players tended to have many short duration gaze fixations when sizing up a play, followed by a longer single fixation on the most important player/location. I'm still mulling over how to implement this in climbing. |
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JLP wrote:Mark - from your last few threads, I think you'd click with Justin Sjong. Suggest you shell out a few bucks for a few hours of coaching with him at Movement.I have. He's great. Still digesting the learning from our last session. Really a nice guy too. Thanks for the suggestion! |
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After seeing the NYT article I started experimenting a little with this. I don't understand it but gaze control seems to have a climbing-related performance benefit in a number of areas: really focusing on one spot while slacklining, only winding up and looking at the target hold 1x when dynoing, focusing on one spot when trying to maintain a multi-minute difficult rest position while pumped, even when briefly centering/regrouping pre-crux. |
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Interesting read. Sounds like something we used in the military to better our shooting at distance. Wonder if it has it's roots in neurolinguistic programming. Some excercises in NLP use eye movement to help "reprogram" the brain in a short period of time. |
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I always thought it was "Whispering eye"? |
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"H" wrote: Some excercises in NLP use eye movement to help "reprogram" the brain in a short period of time.Mind elaborating? |
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Mark E Dixon wrote: Mind elaborating?"This technique for accelerated learning allows you to make any new action or skill automatic in your behavior. It is useful any time you want to have more choices, learn a new skill, or model an expert. 1. Imagine looking off a little to your right, and see yourself in front of you. 2. Decide what you would like to learn how to do. It may be acting in a more satisfying way in a current situation, or it may be doing something new. How would that other you look if that other you could already do it? Construct a movie of that other you doing it. If the movie is incomplete, that other you can pretend “as if” he/she were able to handle situations like that easily. Now watch as the movie fills in any missing parts. If you need more information, seek a skilled role model, live or taped. Carefully observe and listen as the role model performs the desired behavior. Have that role model transform into the “real” you doing it. Watch as the role model turns into that other you doing the new behavior in the desired situation or location. 3. See and hear that other you doing the new behavior in the desired situation or location. 4. Is what you see and hear what you want? Is that satisfactory to you? 5. If something is missing, or the experience doesn’t look or sound satisfying or appropriate, adjust it until it is a full and satisfying experience. You can do this by deliberately making the changes you want. Or you can let a fog or mist conceal the movie while your unconscious mind makes the adjustments and clears the fog when it’s adjusted appropriately. 6. Step into the beginning of your movie and live through it in the desired situation, having all the sensations and feelings. 7. Discover if anything is missing from the experience. If it is a full, satisfying, and desirable experience, skip ahead to step 9." From an NLP manual |
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Love the hair in the video, but not enough mariachi |
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I have been forcing myself to watch my foot placements the last week or more and have a couple of observations. |
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Brian Adzima wrote:I also suspect that the drill was not as useful as 'silent feet,' but it may have its place.It's not a drill, it's a lifestyle :-) I've been practicing this for a month now and find it very useful, both for optimizing foot placement and for focusing attention externally. I have also been carefully watching the better climbers in the gym, who generally spend just that extra bit of time to look at their foot or hand after it is placed. FWIW, ARC training was a good time to practice this and try to incorporate it as a habit. Working on stress proofing it now. |
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Interesting thought. The main issue I see w/ any translation to climbing is that 90% of the study material focuses on fine motor control based skills in a "relaxed" setting. |