The Effect of Failure and the Nature of the Audience on Performance of a Complex Motor Task
- 1 March 1975
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Motor Behavior
- Vol. 7 (1) , 29-35
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00222895.1975.10735010
Abstract
Social facilitation theory states that an audience functions as a conditioned stimulus for generalized drive and that this drive effect is learned through classical conditioning. In the present study an attempt was made to classically condition an aversive drive to an audience by having a subject fail a task in front of an audience. A sample of 72 subjects (12 per group) took part in a 3 × 2 factorial design. Half of the subjects were exposed to failure in front of an audience on a first task. These subjects then performed a second complex motor task in front of the same audience who were described as either experts on this second task or as students who were interested in the task (non-expert audience). No differences in performance were found between those groups that had failed a first task and those that had not. However, significant differences in performance were found between the no-audience control, non-expert audience, and expert audience conditions.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Anticipated evaluation and audience presence in the enhancement of dominant responsesJournal of Experimental Social Psychology, 1971
- The drive theory of social facilitation.Psychological Review, 1971
- Social facilitation of dominant responses by the presence of an audience and the mere presence of others.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1968
- Evaluation apprehension and the social facilitation of dominant and subordinate responses.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1968
- Secondary Motivational SystemsAnnual Review of Psychology, 1967
- Social facilitation of dominant and subordinate responsesJournal of Experimental Social Psychology, 1966
- The Motivational Components of Manifest Anxiety: Drive and Drive StimuliPublished by Elsevier ,1966
- Social FacilitationScience, 1965