Sport psychology goes mainstream: Research shows elite mental skills help everyday performance — and how Thailand can use them
A growing body of research shows that mental skills long used by elite athletes — visualization, targeted self-talk, layered goal-setting, quick physical resets and a focus on controllables — can measurably improve everyday performance, from public speaking to exams and even childbirth. A recent study of more than 44,000 participants found that brief training in sport psychology techniques helped people perform better against a computer-simulated opponent, underscoring that mental training yields benefits for nonathletes when practiced consistently. For Thai readers asking “What practical tools can I use today?” the short answer is: learn a few simple cue words, rehearse the most critical moments mentally, set tiered goals rather than a single do-or-die outcome, and build short physical rituals to reset after mistakes.