Eng Yu Fan, Little Daniel R, Yang Andy, Wensinger Anchalee, Roberts Leo J
School of Psychological Sciences, University of Melbourne, Australia.
School of Psychological Sciences, Monash University, Australia.
PLoS One. 2025 Jan 22;20(1):e0316355. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0316355. eCollection 2025.
Non-dominant hand contractions (NDHCs) have been shown to help expert motor skills in high-pressure scenarios that induce performance anxiety. Most studies of NHDCs under pressure have examined benefits in overlearned specialist movements (e.g., sporting skills), while few have considered if NDHCs can aid common movements with population-wide expertise (e.g., typing). Accordingly, across three experiments, we explored if NDHCs could protect or facilitate performance under time and/or evaluation pressure in a cursor positioning task (Experiments 1 & 2) and a typing task (Experiment 3). Despite varying the nature of the task, pressure manipulation, and design, and successfully manipulating state anxiety in each experiment, we found no evidence that NDHCs assist performance under pressure in these tasks. For the pressure × contraction condition interaction, the largest inclusion Bayes Factor was .40 for task response time and .62 for task error (Experiment 1), indicating evidence in favour of a null result. Our results, along with other recent studies in this area, cast doubt on the benefits of NDHCs under pressure outside sporting tasks and underline the need for a better mechanistic account of the phenomenon.
非优势手收缩(NDHCs)已被证明有助于在引发表现焦虑的高压场景中提升专业运动技能。大多数关于压力下NDHCs的研究都考察了其在过度学习的专业动作(如运动技能)中的益处,而很少有人考虑NDHCs是否能辅助具有广泛人群专业性的常见动作(如打字)。因此,在三项实验中,我们探究了在光标定位任务(实验1和2)和打字任务(实验3)中,NDHCs是否能在时间和/或评估压力下保护或促进表现。尽管在每个实验中任务性质、压力操纵和设计各不相同,且成功操纵了状态焦虑,但我们没有发现证据表明NDHCs能在这些任务的压力下辅助表现。对于压力×收缩条件的交互作用,任务反应时间的最大包含贝叶斯因子为0.40,任务错误的为0.62(实验1),表明支持零结果的证据。我们的结果,以及该领域最近的其他研究,对压力下NDHCs在体育任务之外的益处提出了质疑,并强调需要对这一现象进行更好的机制解释。