ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Sian Leah Beilock - Cognitive scientist
Sian Leah Beilock studies how performance anxiety can be exacerbated or alleviated, and the simple strategies we can use to ensure success under pressure.

Why you should listen

Sian Leah Beilock is exploring the science behind why people "choke" in pressure-packed situations. Specifically, she examines factors in the brain and body that influence performance in stressful situations ranging from test-taking to public speaking to sporting events. Using a variety of research methods, including assessing test performance to neuroimaging techniques, Beilock's work is aimed at better understanding how our cognition and reasoning skills change when we are under stress.

In 2017, the National Academy of Sciences honored Beilock with the Troland Award, in recognition of her pioneering work in experimental psychology. She has published two books and more than 100 papers though her research. After serving as Executive Vice Provost of the University of Chicago, Beilock was recently appointed as the eighth President of Barnard College.

More profile about the speaker
Sian Leah Beilock | Speaker | TED.com
TEDMED 2017

Sian Leah Beilock: Why we choke under pressure -- and how to avoid it

Filmed:
2,153,880 views

When the pressure is on, why do we sometimes fail to live up to our potential? Cognitive scientist and Barnard College president Sian Leah Beilock reveals what happens in your brain and body when you choke in stressful situations, sharing psychological tools that can help you perform at your best when it matters most.
- Cognitive scientist
Sian Leah Beilock studies how performance anxiety can be exacerbated or alleviated, and the simple strategies we can use to ensure success under pressure. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:12
One of the most humiliating things
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that you can say about someone
is "they choked."
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And boy, do I know that feeling.
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Growing up, I was an avid athlete.
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My main sport was soccer,
and I was a goalkeeper,
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which is both the best
and the worst position on the field.
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You see, when you're a goalie,
you get this special uniform,
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you get all the glory
for a great shot saved,
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but you also get the grief
when you land a shot in the goal.
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When you're a goalie,
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all eyes are on you,
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and with that comes the pressure.
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I distinctly remember
one game in high school.
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I was playing for
the California state team
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which is part of the Olympic
Development Program.
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01:01
I was having a great game ...
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01:04
until I realized that the national coach
was standing right behind me.
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That's when everything changed.
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In a matter of seconds,
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I went from playing at the top
to the bottom of my ability.
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01:22
Just knowing that I was being evaluated
changed my performance
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and forever how I thought about
the mental aspect of how we perform.
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All of a sudden the ball
seemed to go in slow motion,
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and I was fixated on my every move.
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The next shot that came I bobbled,
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but thankfully it didn't land in the goal.
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The shot after that,
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I wasn't so lucky:
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I tipped it right into the net.
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My team lost;
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the national coach walked away.
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I choked under the pressure
of those evaluative eyes on me.
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02:05
Just about everyone
does it from time to time --
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there are so many opportunities,
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whether it's taking a test,
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giving a talk,
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pitching to a client
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or that special form of torture
I like to call the job interview.
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(Laughter)
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But the question is why.
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Why do we sometimes fail to perform
up to our potential under pressure?
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It's especially bewildering
in the case of athletes
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who spend so much time
physically honing their craft.
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But what about their minds?
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Not as much.
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This is true off
the playing field as well.
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Whether we're taking a test
of giving a talk,
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it's easy to feel like we're ready --
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at the top of our game --
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and then perform at our worst
when it matters most.
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It turns out that rarely do we practice
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under the types of conditions
we're actually going to perform under,
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and as a result,
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when all eyes are on us,
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we sometimes flub our performance.
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Of course, the question is,
why is this the case?
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And my experience on the playing field --
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and in other important
facets of my life --
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really pushed me into the field
of cognitive science.
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I wanted to know how we could reach
our limitless potential.
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I wanted to understand
how we could use our knowledge
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of the mind and the brain
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to come up with psychological tools
that would help us perform at our best.
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So why does it happen?
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Why do we sometimes fail
to perform up to what we're capable of
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when the pressure is on?
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It may not be so surprising to hear
that in stressful situations, we worry.
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We worry about the situation,
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the consequences,
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what others will think of us.
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But what is surprising
is that we often get in our own way
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precisely because our worries
prompt us to concentrate too much.
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That's right --
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we pay too much attention
to what we're doing.
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When we're concerned
about performing our best,
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we often try and control
aspects of what we're doing
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that are best left on autopilot,
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outside conscious awareness,
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and as a result,
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we mess up.
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Think about a situation
where you're shuffling down the stairs.
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What would happen if I asked you
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to think about what
you're doing with your knee
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while you're doing that?
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There's a good chance
you'd fall on your face.
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We as humans only have the ability
to pay attention to so much at once,
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which is why, by the way,
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it's not a good idea
to drive and talk on the cell phone.
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And under pressure,
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when we're concerned
about performing at our best,
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we can try and control
aspects of what we're doing
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that should be left
outside conscious control.
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The end result is that we mess up.
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My research team and I have studied
this phenomenon of overattention,
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and we call it paralysis by analysis.
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In one study, we asked college
soccer players to dribble a soccer ball
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and to pay attention
to an aspect of their performance
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that they would not otherwise attend to.
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We asked them to pay attention
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to what side of the foot
was contacting the ball.
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We showed that performance
was slower and more error-prone
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when we drew their attention
to the step-by-step details
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of what they were doing.
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When the pressure is on,
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we're often concerned
with performing at our best,
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and as a result we try and control
what we're doing
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to force the best performance.
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The end result
is that we actually screw up.
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In basketball,
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the term "unconscious" is used
to describe a shooter who can't miss.
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And San Antonio Spurs star
Tim Duncan has said,
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"When you have to stop and think,
that's when you mess up."
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In dance, the great choreographer,
George Balanchine,
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used to urge his dancers,
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"Don't think, just do."
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When the pressure's on,
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when we want to put our best foot forward,
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somewhat ironically,
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we often try and control what we're doing
in a way that leads to worse performance.
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So what do we do?
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Knowing that we have
this overactive attention,
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how do we ensure
that we perform at our best?
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A lot of it comes down
to the prefrontal cortex,
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that front part of our brain
that sits over our eyes
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and usually helps us
focus in positive ways.
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It often gets hooked on the wrong things.
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So how do we unhook it?
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Something as simple as singing a song,
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or paying attention to one's pinky toe,
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as pro golfer Jack Nicklaus
was rumored to do,
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can help us take our mind
off those pesky details.
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It's also true that practicing
under conditions
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that we're going to perform under --
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closing the gap between
training and competition
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can help us get used
to that feeling of all eyes on us.
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This is true off
the playing field as well.
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Whether it's getting ready for an exam
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or preparing for a big talk --
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one that might have
a little pressure associated with it --
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(Laughter)
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getting used to the types of situations
you're going to perform under
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really matters.
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When you're taking a test, close the book,
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practice retrieving the answer
from memory under timed situations,
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and when you're giving a talk,
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practice in front of others.
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And if you can't find anyone
who will listen,
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practice in front of a video camera
or even a mirror.
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The ability to get used to what it will
feel like can make the difference
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in whether we choke or thrive.
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We've also figured out some ways
to get rid of those pesky worries
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and self-doubts that tend to creep up
in the stressful situations.
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Researchers have shown that simply
jotting down your thoughts and worries
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before a stressful event
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can help to download them from mind --
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make them less likely
to pop up in the moment.
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It's kind of like when you wake up
in the middle of the night
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and you're really worried
about what you have to do the next day,
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you're trying to think about
everything you have to accomplish,
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and you write it down
and then you can go back to sleep.
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Journaling, or getting
those thoughts down on paper,
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makes it less likely they'll pop up
and distract you in the moment.
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The end result is that you can
perform your best when it matters most.
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So up until now,
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I've talked about what happens
when we put limits on ourselves
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and some tips we can use
to help perform up to our potential.
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But it's important to remember
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that it's not just
our own individual being
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that can put limits
and that can perform poorly;
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our environment has an effect
on whether we choke or thrive.
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Our parents, our teachers,
our coaches, our bosses all influence
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whether or not we can put our best
foot forward when it matters most.
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Take math as an example.
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That's right, I said it:
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math.
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Lots of people profess to choke
or are anxious about doing math,
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whether it's taking a test or even
calculating the tip on a dinner bill
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as our smart friends look on.
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And it's quite socially acceptable
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to talk about choking
or performing poorly in math.
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You don't hear highly educated people
walking around talking about the fact
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or bragging about the fact
that they're not good readers,
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but you hear people all the time bragging
about how they're not math people.
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And unfortunately,
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in the US, this tends to be
more so among girls and women
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than boys and men.
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My research team and I
have tried to understand
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where this fear of math comes from,
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and we've actually peered
inside the brains
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using functional magnetic
resonance imaging,
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of people who are worried about math.
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We've shown that math phobia correlates
with a concrete visceral sensation
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such as pain,
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of which we have
every right to feel anxious.
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10:27
In fact, when people
who are worried about math
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are just getting ready
to take a math test --
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they're not even taking it,
they're just getting ready --
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areas of the brain known the be involved
in our neural pain response are active.
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When we say math is painful,
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there's some truth to it for some people.
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But where does this
math anxiety come from?
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It turns out that math
anxiety is contagious.
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When adults are worried about math,
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the children around them
start worrying, too.
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As young as first grade,
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when kids are in classrooms
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with teachers who are anxious
about their own math ability,
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these kids learn less
across the school year.
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And it turns out that this
is more prevalent in girls than boys.
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At this young age,
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kids tend to mimic same-sex adults,
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and at least in the US,
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over 90 percent of our elementary
school teachers are women.
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Of course, it's not just
what happens in the classroom.
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Social media plays a big role here, too.
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11:34
It wasn't so long ago
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that you could purchase a Teen Talk Barbie
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that when the cord was pulled,
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it would say things like,
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"Will we ever have enough clothes?"
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and "Math class is tough."
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And just a few years ago,
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major retailers were marketing
T-shirts at our young girls
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that read things like,
"I'm too pretty to do math,"
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or, "I'm too pretty to do my homework
so my brother does it for me."
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And let's not forget about the parents.
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Oh, the parents.
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It turns out that when parents are worried
about their own math ability
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and they help their kids a lot
with math homework,
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their kids learn less math
across the school year.
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As one parent put it,
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"I judge my first grader's math homework
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by whether it's a one-glass assignment
or a three-glass night."
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(Laughter)
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When adults are anxious
about their own math ability,
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it rubs off on their kids
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and it affects whether
they choke or thrive.
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But just as we can put limits on others,
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we can take them off.
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My research team and I have shown
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that when we help parents
do fun math activities with their kids --
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rather than, say, just doing
bedtime stories or bedtime reading,
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they do bedtime math,
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which are fun story problems
to do with your kids at night,
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not only do children's attitudes
about math improve,
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but their math performance
across the school year improves as well.
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Our environment matters.
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From the classroom to parents to media,
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and it can really make a difference
in terms of whether we choke or thrive.
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Fast-forward from
my high school soccer game
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to my freshman year in college.
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I was in the chemistry sequence
for science majors,
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and boy did I not belong.
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Even though I studied
for my first midterm exam --
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I thought I was ready to go --
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I bombed it.
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I literally got the worst grade
in a class of 400 students.
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I was convinced I wasn't going
to be a science major,
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that maybe I was dropping
out of college altogether.
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But then I changed how I studied.
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Instead of studying alone,
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I started studying with a group of friends
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who at the end of the study session
would close their book
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and compete for the right answer.
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We learned to practice under stress.
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If you could've looked inside my brain
during that first midterm exam,
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14:19
you likely would've seen
a neural pain response
266
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2776
14:22
a lot like the math-anxious
individuals I study.
267
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2760
14:25
It was probably there during
the stressful study situation as well.
268
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3720
14:30
But when I walked into the final,
269
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2096
14:32
my mind was quiet,
270
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1736
14:34
and I actually got one of the highest
grades in the entire class.
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3760
14:40
It wasn't just
about learning the material;
272
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3136
14:43
it was about learning how to overcome
my limits when it mattered most.
273
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5160
14:49
What happens in our heads really matters,
274
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2896
14:52
and knowing this,
275
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1200
14:55
we can learn how to prepare ourselves
and others for success,
276
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5416
15:00
not just on the playing field
but in the boardroom
277
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3056
15:03
and in the classroom as well.
278
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2016
15:05
Thank you.
279
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1216
15:07
(Applause)
280
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3560

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ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Sian Leah Beilock - Cognitive scientist
Sian Leah Beilock studies how performance anxiety can be exacerbated or alleviated, and the simple strategies we can use to ensure success under pressure.

Why you should listen

Sian Leah Beilock is exploring the science behind why people "choke" in pressure-packed situations. Specifically, she examines factors in the brain and body that influence performance in stressful situations ranging from test-taking to public speaking to sporting events. Using a variety of research methods, including assessing test performance to neuroimaging techniques, Beilock's work is aimed at better understanding how our cognition and reasoning skills change when we are under stress.

In 2017, the National Academy of Sciences honored Beilock with the Troland Award, in recognition of her pioneering work in experimental psychology. She has published two books and more than 100 papers though her research. After serving as Executive Vice Provost of the University of Chicago, Beilock was recently appointed as the eighth President of Barnard College.

More profile about the speaker
Sian Leah Beilock | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

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