填空题
Think golf is
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game? Think again. Researchers including Debbie Crews of Arizona State University and John Milton of the University of Chicago have been studying patterns of brain activation in golfers. Their conclusion: the better the golfer, the
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he shows in the seconds before he
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.
Crews, a
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who studies putting, has found that a
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between amateurs and professionals lies in the
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, the seat of logic, analysis,
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and the kinds of thoughts. Professionals, once
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how to make a shot, follow an
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that renders conscious thought unnecessary.
When Milton asked some LPGA golfers what they thought about just before
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, they answered: nothing. He
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a half-dozen pros and an equal number of amateurs and had them imagine making a specific shot while
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in a functional MRI machine. The amateurs showed far more total brain activation
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of the brain. In particular, amateurs activated the basal ganglia—involved in learning motor functions—and the basal forebrain and amygdale, responsible for,
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, emotions. Some of his
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worried about hitting the ball into the water, which was curious, because he hadn"t even
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in describing the imaginary shot to them.
Milton is trying to
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to stroke and other rehabilitation patients who have to
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like walking; he recommends putting more
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and improving mental focus. In many
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, it seems, half the game really is 90 percent mental.