Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Monday 2nd January 2012 : Popcorn @ Heaven. The New Year Mirror Ball @ Heaven, 9 The Arches, Villiers St London

monday 2nd january

the new year mirror ball

11pm til 5.30 am

the main floor

upfront vocal & progressive house

jonesey 11pm til 1am
jamie hammond special extended set
1am til 5.30am

the stage bar

dj harvey adam plays all the best pop, top 40 chart and guilty pleasures

the star bar

terry t-rex gets down, dark and really dirty playing delicious rnb & hip hop in the star bar

the departure lounge

hosted by adrianna

fantastic night time drinks offers & promotions with drinks from only ?2

free entry guestlist available from

www.popcorn-heaven.com

otherwise ?4 b4 midnight, ?8 afterwards

all students, service industry staff and members (with card/id or payslip) get free entry all night

popcorn is a mixed club night and operates a strict everyone welcome door policy

Source: http://www.spraci.com/events/244512.html

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Miami Lakes Mayor Addresses Teen Curfew

MIAMI LAKES (CBS4)- Following a Christmas melee in the main street area of Miami Lakes, the mayor is speaking out to assure residents that the city is safe and explaining why there is now a curfew in effect for all teenagers.

The teen curfew went into effect Friday night in Miami Lakes following a chaotic Dec. 25 melee and shooting that caused police to declare a ?countywide emergency? in the suburb off the Palmetto Expressway.

Police began enforcing an 8 p.m. curfew and round up unaccompanied minors starting Friday, Dec. 30th after town officials vowed to step up police presence at the outdoor Main Street Mall.

Thousands of teenagers descended on the mall in part because of a rash of Twitter and Facebook messages encouraging kids to turn out on Christmas night, according to Miami Lakes officials.

?All over the place. It was really crazy,? said Ariel Martinez, the Miami Lakes resident who posted the video of the chaos on YouTube.

On Saturday, Mayor Michael A. Pizzi, Jr. called the Christmas chaos an isolated incident. ?he said it has never happened before and he went so far as to say ?read my lips? it will never happen again.

The mayor promises an overwhelming police presence from now on, but he said police patrolling will be off duty officers hired by the businesses and shops in the main street shopping area.

?

?The town is now mandating they have police on main street and that they pay for it so the stepped up security and the curfew we?ve solved the problem and we?ve done it without expense to the taxpayers,? he said.

But there is still confusion as to what exactly happened but what officials do know is that a mob of teenagers stampeded through the shopping center when either firecrackers, gunshots, or both exploded outside the Cobb movie theater.

Police said as many as 5,000 people were gathered outside the theater when someone set off fireworks and cherry bombs which caused the crowd to scatter quickly. Many ran inside the theater where manager Jessica Cordova said an officer was punched in the face and two of her employees were attacked. Police have not confirmed reports that an officer was assaulted, or whether any arrests had been made.

Then came the gunshots. One bullet hit 16-year-old Derek Rodriguez. He was outside the theater around 10:30 p.m. when a fight broke out. He ran and didn?t realize he?d been hit until he got to his friend?s car. The bullet passed through the right side of his chest and into his bicep.

That led to town officials starting an 8 p.m. curfew for minors not accompanied by a parent.

?The efforts to say, if you want to be here, be here with a parent, that?s very appropriate,? said Dave Graveline, a radio personality who just moved his studio to Main Street. His nationally-syndicated radio show, ?Into Tomorrow,? will is broadcast from a street-side studio here.

?A fine, upscale community like Miami Lakes is not where you have that kind of commotion,? said Graveline.

Police from nine agencies responded to the violence.

?In this case, I guess it was Miami Lakes? turn to get a big crowd, and hopefully, it?s the last time,? said Graveline.

?

Source: http://miami.cbslocal.com/2011/12/31/miami-lakes-mayor-addresses-teen-curfew/

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Savannah Brinson or Yvette Prieto: Who Would You Rather?


The debate between LeBron James and Michael Jordan was settled perfectly by Jason Segel's character in Bad Teacher. One basketball legend has six championships, the other zero. Case closed.

But the debate between Savannah Brinson and Yvette Prieto is just getting underway.

The former is the mother of LeBron's two children, as well as his new fiancee, following an early Sunday morning proposal. Prieto, meanwhile, is a Cuban/American model who agreed to marry Jordan last week. Compare the beauties below and decide:

Which would you rather back down in the post... if you know what we mean?

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2012/01/savannah-brinson-or-yvette-prieto-who-would-you-rather/

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Monday, January 2, 2012

Iran's navy tests cruise missile as part of drill (AP)

TEHRAN, Iran ? Iran test-fired a surface-to-surface cruise missile Monday in a drill its navy chief said proved Tehran was in complete control of the strategic Strait of Hormuz, the passageway for one-sixth of the world's oil supply.

The 10-day naval maneuvers, which are scheduled to end Tuesday, were Iran's latest show of strength in the face of mounting international criticism over its nuclear program. Tehran has threatened to close the strait as possible retaliation to new U.S. economic sanctions.

The missile, called "Ghader," or "Capable" in Farsi, was described as an upgraded version of one that has been in service before. The official IRNA news agency said the missile "successfully hit its intended target" during the exercise.

An earlier version of the same cruise missile had a range of 124 miles (200 kilometers) and could travel at low altitudes. There were suggestions it could counter the U.S. naval presence in the Persian Gulf.

French Foreign Ministry spokesman Bernard Valero said at a regular online briefing Monday that France "regrets the very bad signal to the international community sent by the latest missile tests announced by Iran."

There have been conflicting comments from Iranian officials over Tehran's intentions to close the Strait of Hormuz and U.S. warnings against such an ominous move.

"The Strait of Hormuz is completely under our control," Iran's navy chief Adm. Habibollah Sayyari said after Monday's test. "We do not allow any enemy to pose threats to our interests."

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said the Iranian exercise was a show of strength intended "to deter the world from continuing sanctions against it."

Barak said at a party meeting that he doubts Iran would close the strait because that would only bring harsher international sanctions.

Israel considers Iran an existential threat due to its nuclear and long-range missile program. Iran is also a major backer of Hamas and Hezbollah militants who are fighting Israel.

The West fears Iran's nuclear program aims to develop weapons ? a charge Tehran denies, insisting it is for peaceful purposes only.

President Barack Obama has signed a bill that applies penalties against Iran's central bank in an effort to hamper Tehran's ability to fund its nuclear enrichment program, although the administration is looking to soften the impact of those penalties because of concerns that they could lead to a spike in global oil prices or cause economic hardship on U.S. allies that import petroleum from Iran.

The penalties do not go into effect for six months. The president can waive them for national security reasons or if the country with jurisdiction over the foreign financial institution has significantly reduced its purchases of Iranian oil.

The latest version of the Ghader missile was delivered in September to the naval division of Iran's Revolutionary Guard. At the time, Tehran said it is capable of destroying warships.

"In comparison with the previous version, the highly advanced Ghader missile system has been upgraded in terms of its radar, satellite communications, precision in target destruction, as well as range and radar-evading mechanism," said Rear Adm. Mahmoud Mousavi, a spokesman for the drill.

State TV showed video depicting the launch of two missiles, which it said could hit targets hundreds of kilometers (miles) away. The broadcast said two more shorter-range missiles were also tested.

"We conducted the drill ... to let everybody know that Iran's defense and deterrence powers on the open seas and the Strait of Hormuz are aimed at defending our borders, resources and our nation," Sayyari said.

On Sunday, Iran test-fired an advanced surface-to-air missile called "Mehrab," or "Altar," which was described as a medium-range weapon.

Iran had said the sea maneuvers would cover a 1,250-mile (2,000-kilometer) stretch of water beyond the Strait of Hormuz at the mouth of the Persian Gulf, as well as parts of the Indian Ocean and the Gulf of Aden.

A leading Iranian lawmaker said Sunday the maneuvers served as practice for closing the strait if the West blocks Iran's oil sales. After top Iranian officials made the same threat a week ago, military commanders emphasized that Iran has no intention of blocking the waterway now.

Mousavi also emphasized Sunday that Iran has no plan to choke the strait.

"We won't disrupt traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. We are not after this," the semiofficial ISNA news agency quoted him as saying.

The drill was "tactical" and meant to show Iran was capable of assuming full control over the strait if needed, he said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120102/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_iran_navy_drill

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Skype gifts NYC with NYE WiFi, so you can miss the ball drop while Skyping the ball drop

Those kind folk at Skype already served up plenty of glorious WiFi waves across US airports this Christmas, and now it's New York City's turn. From noon on the 31st until January 1st, if you spy a "Skype WiFi" network, those tasty bytes are yours for the taking. The VoIP don has teamed up with WiFi provider Towerstream for the give-away, and recommends you load-up on the latest version of its famous software to make sure you don't miss out. If you pack an iDevice, then it's the Skype WiFi app you'll be wanting updated in the lead up to midnight. Just make sure you don't miss that kiss, just for a festive freebie.

Skype gifts NYC with NYE WiFi, so you can miss the ball drop while Skyping the ball drop originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 31 Dec 2011 12:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/31/skype-gifts-nyc-with-nye-wifi-so-you-can-miss-the-ball-drop-whi/

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Sunday, January 1, 2012

NASA spacecraft orbits moon on New Year's Eve

The first of two gravity-mapping NASA spacecraft entered into orbit around the moon Saturday, marking a New Year's arrival in a mission that will study Earth's nearest neighbor from crust to core.

After three months of spaceflight, the Grail-A probe fired its main engine at 4:21 p.m. ET Saturday for a 40-minute maneuver putting it in lunar orbit, NASA said. The spacecraft's twin, Grail-B, is slated to follow on Sunday at 5:05 p.m. ET.

"Burn complete! GRAIL-A is now orbiting the moon and awaiting the arrival of its twin GRAIL-B on New Year's Day," officials from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., confirmed via Twitter.

After gradually circling down to super-low orbits, the pair will zip around the moon in tandem, working together to map the lunar gravity field in unprecedented detail, researchers said.

Scientists expect the probes' measurements to help unlock some longstanding mysteries about the moon's composition and evolution ? mysteries that remain unsolved despite more than 100 missions to the moon over the years.

"You might think that, given all of these observations, we would know what there is to know about the moon," Grail principal investigator Maria Zuber, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, told reporters Wednesday. "Of course that's not the case."

The moon's many secrets
Scientists think the moon formed after a Mars-size body struck Earth about 4.5 billion years ago. This titanic impact blasted huge amounts of material into space, and they eventually coalesced.

While this basic outline of the moon's origin is pretty well established, many mysteries remain about how the rocky body has evolved since then.

  1. More space news from msnbc.com

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      Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: One of the last astronauts to ride on a space shuttle will be riding a totally different vehicle on Sunday: a flower-bedecked float in the 2012 Rose Parade.

    2. 12 must-see skywatching events in 2012
    3. Martian life might thrive in lava tubes: study
    4. China reveals its space plans up to 2016

Chief among these puzzles, perhaps, is why the near side of the moon ? the face we always see from Earth ? is so different from the far side. For example, plains of volcanic rock (called maria) are much more widespread on the near side, and the far side is higher and more mountainous, with the lunar surface 1.2 miles (1.9 kilometers) higher in elevation, on average, than the near side.

"We don't actually know why the near side and far side of the moon are different," Zuber said. "We think that the answer is locked in the interior."

One possible explanation, proposed by researchers this August, is that the gigantic collision 4.5 billion years ago actually created two moons. The second moon, which was much smaller, later slammed into our moon's far side, the idea goes, spreading itself over the surface rather than creating a crater.

The Grail probes' observations could help determine whether that scenario is accurate, researchers said.

"We believe that we can obtain the information that we need to test this hypothesis," Zuber said.

Formation flying
The $496 million Grail mission (short for Gravity Recovery And Interior Laboratory) launched Sept. 10. The two washing-machine-size probes then spent more than three months making their slow, circuitous way to the moon.

By comparison, NASA's manned Apollo 11 mission in 1969 reached the moon in three days. But Apollo 11 prioritized speed, while Grail's path is energy-efficient and has given engineers ample time to assess the probes' health and charge up their scientific gear, researchers said.

Grail-A and Grail-B still have some work to do from their initial lunar orbits to get into position. They'll spend two months circling lower and lower, eventually settling into orbits just 34 miles (55 kilometers) above the lunar surface by March.

Only then will the twin spacecraft begin their science campaign. They'll chase each other around the moon for 82 days, staying 75 to 225 miles (121 to 362 km) apart. [Video: Grail's Mission to Map Moon Gravity]

Regional differences in the lunar gravity field will cause the two spacecraft to speed up or slow down slightly, changing the distance between them as they fly. Bouncing microwave signals back and forth off each other, Grail-A and Grail-B will gauge these tiny distance variations constantly.

The Grail team will use the twin probes' measurements to construct highly detailed maps of the moon's gravitational field. These maps are expected to reveal a great deal about lunar composition, allowing scientists to draw insights about how the moon formed and how it has changed over time, researchers said.

Public outreach and education are a big part of Grail's mission as well. Each spacecraft is carrying four cameras and will snap photos of the lunar surface at the direction of middle-school students across the country. Students will get to pore over these pictures after they're beamed back down to Earth.

The photo project ? which is called MoonKam and is run by former NASA astronaut Sally Ride ? has already generated lots of enthusiasm. More than 2,100 schools have signed up to participate, according to Zuber.

"We've had a great response to the MoonKam project," Zuber said. "We're still accepting applications. We can accommodate another several hundred schools into the program if there's interest in doing that."

You can follow SPACE.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter:@michaeldwall. Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

? 2012 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45835766/ns/technology_and_science-space/

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Brainy Ballplayers

Superstar athletes are revered for their physical prowess, not for what goes on between their ears. And most postgame interviews do little to challenge the notion that athletes have more brawn than brains.

But brainpower has a vital role in elite sports performance, recent research shows.

?Brawn plays a part, but there?s a whole lot more to it than that,? says John Milton, a neuroscientist at the Claremont Colleges in California.

Whether on the court, field or course, the body depends on the brain for direction. But the brain is a busy taskmaster, with duties beyond guiding motion, making it difficult to focus on that particular job. Like chess masters and virtuoso musicians, superior athletes are better than novices at turning on just the parts of the brain relevant to the desired task, Milton?s work reveals. ?In professionals, the overall brain activation is much lower, but certain connections are enhanced,? he says. In other words, experts employ only the finely tuned neural regions that help enhance performance, without getting bogged down by extraneous information.

Elite athletes? ability to focus the brain might even explain their struggle to eloquently describe performance after the game. Like a starship captain diverting power from life support to bolster shields in a battle, professional athletes temporarily shut down the memory-forming regions of the brain so as to maximize activity in centers that guide movement.

?That?s why they usually thank God or their moms,? says cognitive psychologist Sian Beilock of the University of Chicago. ?They don?t know what they did, so they don?t know what else to say.?

It?s not stupidity; it?s selectivity. And in the last few years scientists have been able to visually capture this concentrated, purposeful neural concert that takes place in the expert athlete?s brain. But even these vibrant brain scans reveal only part of the success story. Other recent studies demonstrate how athletes? brains seamlessly interact with the muscular system to perfect and deploy movements ? and how the athletic brain anticipates actions in advance and updates planned responses as needed.

By examining how such brain processes lead to excellence in sports, as well as what goes wrong when athletes blow it in the big game, scientists think they can enhance training techniques and improve performance under pressure.

In the zone

Using functional MRI scans to monitor blood flow in the brain, Milton and his colleagues have identified the regions essential for expert-level motor skill: the superior parietal and premotor areas. These regions, two of the brain?s motor centers, primarily move the body toward a visually perceived goal and direct complex motion. In brain scans of professional golfers planning a shot, these areas showed heightened activity, Milton and colleagues reported in 2007 in NeuroImage. In contrast, the study found that the brains of beginner golfers preparing a swing showed much more dispersed activity ? especially pervasive in the basal ganglia and limbic system, regions of the brain that control emotions and make people consciously aware of their movements.

Such differences in brain activity reflect the players? different concerns. ?The novices were worried about all kinds of things ? wind, water and sand,? Milton says. ?The pro golfers just hit the ball.?

Yogi Berra once famously quipped that he couldn?t ?think and hit at the same time,? and Milton believes that devoting too much conscious attention to swing mechanics could actually hurt performance, even among big leaguers. His research suggests that when professional golfers think too long about their shots, the athletes activate parts of their brains that they haven?t used during golf since first learning the game, throwing finely tuned sensorimotor pathways out of whack. ?This is because the expert?s brain has already figured out the optimal solution, and anything they consciously change will disrupt that,? Milton says.

The experience of ?being in the zone? could simply be what happens when the brain regions making athletes conscious of their movements are finally quieted and motor centers get free rein to guide the players to victory.

Such an ability to perform a complex motor task without thinking, also called automaticity, gives an athlete a big advantage in competition. But to access a complex movement subconsciously, the athlete must first rehearse the motion countless times in training, fully developing the nerve connections essential for expert muscle control. ?Practice may not make perfect, but it makes permanent,? Milton says.

How close an athlete can get to perfection through training may be driven by attributes a person is born with. ?It depends on the way the neurons connect to the muscles, and that can?t change,? says Daniel Wolpert of the University of Cambridge in England.

The way the nervous system interacts with the musculoskeletal system isn?t flawless. Transmission errors along the way serve as a sort of sensory static, or ?noise,? that prevents the muscles from hearing the message the brain is sending. Static can also disrupt messages that sensory organs such as the eyes and skin send to the brain, leaving an athlete with a distorted image of the state of the game.

Players with less noise gumming up their sensorimotor systems are predisposed to athletic glory. With fewer disruptions, these athletes are able to elicit strong, fast muscle contractions that are incredibly accurate, cheating what scientists call the speed-accuracy, or energy-accuracy, trade-off. Unlike most people, expert athletes don?t have to slow down to improve their execution.

A lucky few are granted this genetic head start, but anyone can ?train muscles and refine a way of moving that reduces the bad consequences of the noise that?s already there,? Wolpert says.

So training is not only about building bulk to overpower an opponent, but also about teaching more nerve and muscle fibers to work in unison to hone one?s movements. Scientists think brain cells known as mirror neurons may help.

The value of reflection

When a person watches someone else performing an action, the same neurons that would fire if the observer were replicating that action become active ? even if that observer is standing completely still. This neural activity is the brain?s way of simulating the motion being witnessed, and can help an athlete reproduce those movements. Mirror neurons thus provide ?a system for matching what you do with what you see others doing,? says Salvatore Aglioti of Sapienza University of Rome.

The mirror system may also mediate another important function in the athlete?s brain ? anticipation. If mirror neurons are already simulating the motions of an opponent, an observing athlete might use information from those neurons to chart out the full course of the adversary?s motion. In sports where time is of the essence, the ability to predict a movement offers a major leg up.

Based on his knowledge of the mirror system, Aglioti hypothesized that athletes focus attention not solely on the ball, for example, but also on their opponents? bodies to gain clues that will help in deciding whether to expend energy on a certain response. He studied how well expert basketball players, novices and expert watchers including coaches gauged the result of a free throw based solely on time-lapse photographs depicting various stages of another player?s shooting motion, reporting the findings in 2008 in Nature Neuroscience.?Compared to novices and scouts, elite athletes were better at predicting the outcome of a shot after watching the body motion of basketball players,? Aglioti says.

Expert cricket batters also appear to gain important information from the physical details of an opponent?s throwing motion, suggests a team of Australian researchers. After showing study participants sequential photographs of a bowler in motion, the scientists found that elite batters? ability to predict the final location of a ball in flight was impaired when the researchers blocked out the arm or hand of the hurling bowler. Novices were equally bad at predicting where the ball was headed regardless of whether they could see the bowler?s arm or hand.

What?s more, anticipation abilities improved among expert batters when they were allowed to fully swing their bat while making a prediction, compared with predicting while standing still or while only completing the lower-body motion of a swing, the Australian team reported last year in Acta Psychologica. Novices? predictive ability did not improve when they picked up the bat, suggesting that success in sports is partly dependent on how effectively the brain couples the body?s perceptive machinery to its motor processes.

Milton has suggested that athletes in all fast-ball sports ? including baseball and tennis ? anticipate where the ball is headed based on information derived from watching their opponents? movements. What helps separate elite members of these sports from novices is a superior ability to sort out the relevant from the irrelevant physical cues.

Of course, once the brain gets the message, the body still has to react appropriately.

A model plan for the future

In the heat of the game, athletes have to process the sensory data they?re taking in to automatically deliver the best motor response. To save precious time while performing such calculations, the brain builds a virtual representation of the world so it can predict what might happen next, new research finds. Called ?forward models,? these mental maps allow athletes to preplan ?what they want to accomplish and how they?re going to accomplish it,? says Emanuel Todorov of the University of Washington in Seattle.

The brain readies commonly repeated actions in the motor cortex just like a torpedo is loaded into a firing bay. But the response action can?t fire until the command to act is given by the forward model. If an athlete?s forward model is working well, it determines the best countermove quickly, reducing delays in the body?s movement.

Because they provide reference data, previous experiences are essential for crafting forward models. For example, if tennis star Rafael Nadal hits the ball with heavy topspin towards Roger Federer, Federer?s brain computes bounce heights from previous topspin shots to determine how high the ball will bounce, so he can prepare a swing well before the ball rebounds off the ground.

Forward models aren?t set entirely in mental stone, however ? a good thing, since rarely are multiple scenarios in sport exactly the same. The ball Nadal hits toward Federer might be slightly deflated or could glance off the baseline, causing the topspin shot to bounce lower than Federer would have predicted based solely on previous topspin shots. If Federer?s forward model didn?t make use of current sensory information to adjust predictions built on ?priors? ? the accumulated knowledge of all the topspin shots he has seen before ? he wouldn?t be able to react on the fly when something unexpected happens.

The brain?s predictive machinery is constantly being updated with new sensory information as it executes a motion, a feedback loop that helps the body maintain control over its movement, Todorov says. ?Given your goal, given where you currently are, the optimal feedback loop posits the best way to get there,? he says.

Todorov and other scientists are finding that athletes? brains calibrate forward models in a manner consistent with Bayesian decision theory, a statistical approach that combines a continual stream of new information with previous beliefs. Because there is a level of uncertainty associated with sensory input, the brain has to decide whether it is going to rely more on the new data (which could be misleading) or on more credible (albeit potentially outdated) priors. Elite athletes, who have acquired more priors through frequent competition and practice and who have less noise in their sensory input and motor output, will have the edge, Todorov suggests.

Buckling under pressure

Even the best athletes, though, don?t always perform when the pressure is on.

?I don?t rattle, kid,? says Paul Newman, as Fast Eddie Felson, to another pool shark in The Hustler. Unfortunately for Eddie, this is true only when he heeds his own mantra and plays ?fast and loose.? When he starts to let self-doubt and other concerns slow him down, his pool cue stops feeling like it has nerves in it and the balls stop dropping.

Fast Eddie and real-world athletes might choke when it matters most because the stress of the situation or outside life seeps in, Beilock and colleagues reported in May in the Journal of Experimental Psychology. The team is investigating what happens in the brains of athletes who fail to perform to their potential when the stakes are highest.

?In these stressful situations, athletes become worried about the situation and its consequences, and these worries disrupt ability to allocate attention to where they need it,? says Beilock.

Malfunctions of the prefrontal cortex, the center of the brain?s reasoning, emotional control and focusing abilities, are primarily to blame, Beilock says. Stress prompts the prefrontal cortex to try to control information that should be left outside of conscious awareness, causing what she calls ?paralysis by analysis.?

Like Milton, Beilock studies golfers, and she has found that high levels of stress increase activation in the prefrontal cortex of experts, preventing scratch golfers from keeping their swings on autopilot. Such overanalyzing prevents the successful execution of fluid, habit-filled performances that should run automatically, she says.

When athletes think about mechanics too intensely, the pool cue, golf club or tennis racket can start to feel like a foreign and unwieldy instrument. Golfers prompted to weigh in on Tiger Woods? struggles following his personal problems and hiatus from playing in tournaments seemed to recognize the influence of thinking too much. Bubba Watson publicly suggested that Woods was too mental with his swing, saying Woods should drop his swing coach and ?just go out there and play golf.?

Though athletes can?t avoid stressful situations altogether, being aware of the effect of stress on brain-body communication and coordination can help enhance training sessions, Beilock suggests. By putting players in high-stress, gamelike scenarios in practice, coaches can help athletes stay cool during competition.

And since the brain chemistry elicited by intense competition translates to other stressful situations, Beilock believes choke-prevention techniques derived from her sports research could also give college students an edge at exam time or help postgraduates ace a job interview.

Whether competing on the court or in the classroom, recent discoveries suggest that the key to living up to the potential you?re born with is to train your brain well, and keep calm and focused. With such revelations as guidance, the coach of a faltering team might consider playing some En Vogue at halftime to get players in the right frame of mind. The ?90s pop group said it best: ?Free your mind, and the rest will follow.?


All choked up? Brain studies suggest famous choking incidents in sports (some highlighted below) may occur when athletes lose focus, allowing stress and other concerns to occupy their brains.

Greg Norman, 1996
For the first three rounds of the 1996 Masters Tournament, Australian golfer Greg Norman played spectacularly well. He tied the lowest opening round score ever at Augusta National in Georgia and was leading by six strokes heading into the final day of competition. But in the final round, the Shark suddenly lost his bite, shooting six over par to lose by five strokes.

Jana Novotn?, 1993
After dropping the first set of the 1993 Wimbledon final in a tiebreak, Czech tennis player Jana Novotn? started crushing her German opponent Steffi Graf. Novotn? won the next set 6-1 and was serving to go up 5-1 in the pivotal third set. A double fault turned the tide. Novotn? lost her service game and every game after that. Graf won the third set 6-4.

Bill Buckner, 1986
In game six of the 1986 World Series, the Boston Red Sox were up three games to two and tied with the New York Mets in the bottom of the 10th inning when Mets? speedster Mookie Wilson hit a slow roller to Red Sox first baseman Bill Buckner. Buckner let the routine ground ball run through his legs, allowing the Mets to score the winning run.

Memphis Tigers, 2008
With two minutes to go in the 2008 NCAA Men?s Basketball Tournament, Memphis was leading Kansas by nine points. Down the stretch, Memphis All-Americans Derrick Rose (shown) and Chris Douglas-Roberts ? who had collectively made their first six free throws of the game ? made only one of their next five, allowing Kansas to tie the game and then win in overtime.

Tony Romo, 2007
In the first round of the NFL playoffs, the Dallas Cowboys were losing by a touchdown to the Seattle Seahawks late in the game. With one minute to go, the Cowboys scored, but when they went to kick the extra point, quarterback Tony Romo ? also the team?s placekick holder at the time ? botched the snap, and the Cowboys lost by one.

From top: Phil Sandlin/Associated Press; Bob Martin/Getty Images; Boston Globe, Getty Images; Mark Humphrey/AP, Corbis; John Froschauer/AP


Found in: Body & Brain

Source: http://www.sciencenews.org/view/feature/id/337209/title/Brainy_Ballplayers

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