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Documenting and analyzing pre-reflective self-consciousness underlying ongoing performance optimization in elite athletes: the theoretical and methodological approach of the course-of-experience framework.

Eric Terrien, Benoît Huet, Paul Iachkine, Jacques Saury

Frontiers in psychology January 1, 2024 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1382892 via PubMed

Summary

Elite windsurfers' experience of continuous performance improvement involves pre-reflective self-consciousness, not just automaticity. Using the course-of-experience framework, analysis of two athletes reveals meaningful activities during optimization, multiple attentional foci, normative self-assessment, and micro-scale phenomenological descriptions of improvement. This shows the value of studying absorbed, skilled performance through empirical micro-phenomenology.

Study at a glance

Design qualitative study
Sample size 2
Population elite windsurfers
Key finding The course-of-experience framework reveals that elite athletes' performance optimization involves pre-reflective self-consciousness, multidimensional attentional foci, and normative self-assessment.

Abstract

Traditional theories of motor learning emphasize the automaticity of skillful actions. However, recent research has emphasized the role of pre-reflective self-consciousness accompanying skillful action execution. In the present paper, we present the course-of-experience framework as a means of studying elite athletes' pre-reflective self-consciousness in the unfolding activity of performance optimization. We carried out a synthetic presentation of the ontological and epistemological foundation of this framework. Then we illustrated the methodology by an in-depth analysis of two elite windsurfers' courses of experience. The analysis of global and local characteristics of the riders' courses of experience reveal (a) the meaningful activities accompanying the experience of ongoing performance optimization; (b) the multidimensionality of attentional foci and the normativity of performance self-assessment; and (c) a micro-scale phenomenological description of continuous improvement. These results highlight the fruitfulness of the course-of-experience framework to describe the experience of being absorbed in an activity of performance optimization.

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