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Application Of Imagery Theory To Sport Psychology: Some Preliminary Findings, Jeffrey E. Hecker, Linda M. Kaczor
Application Of Imagery Theory To Sport Psychology: Some Preliminary Findings, Jeffrey E. Hecker, Linda M. Kaczor
Psychology Faculty Scholarship
Bioinformational theory has been proposed by Lang (1979a), who suggests that mental images can be understood as products of the brain's information processing capacity. Imagery involves activation of a network of propositionally coded information stored in long-term memory. Propositions concerning physiological and behavioral responses provide a prototype for overt behavior. Processing of response information is associated with somatovisceral arousal. The theory has implications for imagery rehearsal in sport psychology and can account for a variety of findings in the mental practice literature. Hypotheses drawn from bioinformational theory were tested. College athletes imagined four scenes during which their heart rates were …