What Science Says About Achieving Peak Performance
Advances in cognitive neuroscience are enabling
insights into the brain like never before. Neuroscientist Friederike Fabritius
and Hans Hagemann, co-founder of the Munich Leadership Group, combine science
with management consulting to discover which techniques for peak performance
actually work, in their book The Leading Brain: Powerful
Science-Based Strategies for Achieving Peak Performance. Hagemann recently
joined the Knowledge@Wharton show, which airs on SiriusXM
channel 111, to discuss science-based strategies for peak
performance.
Here are five key
takeaways from the interview:
Regulating your negative emotions is critical
to peak performance.
When you try to inhibit
negative emotions that you feel — anger, frustration, disappointment — in the
workplace, the rational and emotional systems in you compete with each other.
When your brain is busy trying to tamp down negative feelings, you become too
distracted to perform well. “Two systems in your brain are competing,” Hagemann
said. “That leads to not being focused on anything anymore.” To regain
cognitive control, recognize and ‘label’ how you feel, he said.
Peak performance is not about entering a
stress state.
“Peak performance
means that you find the environment that gets you in a position, and in a
situation, where you can really perform at your best,” Hagemann said. “We don’t
have the idea of a stressed out top performer.” Instead, the peak performer is
someone whose emotions are under control and as such they can think optimally.
“We are talking about an easygoing situation where you feel that everything is
easy for you to do,” he said. “The best possible situation in this context is
experiencing flow, where everything seems to go very smoothly and you are very
creative and everything is coming to your mind easily.”
Gender and age matter.
Hagemann refers to a
“performance profile” as the amount of intellectual arousal needed to help an
individual achieve peak performance. That amount will make a difference between
men and women, old and young. On an axis ranging from deep sleep to a panic
attack, some people are “sensation seekers,” Hagemann said, and need a lot of
arousal to hit their peak. That means they are often running on testosterone —
he called it “a very male thing” — while others can hit their peak with fewer
stresses placed on them.
Lean towards rewards, not threats.
Every company has a
“reward” circle and a “threat” circle. In a “threat” state, “you get a rush of
cortisol in your bloodstream. That makes your muscles stronger, but it can cut
off your cognitive thinking if it is strong enough,” Hagemann said. In “reward”
circles, people feel good and perform better. “Creating a climate of
appreciation in companies is the best thing you can do,” he said. “This is very
strongly supported by the research that Google did recently.”
Create a psychologically safe workplace.
“In the end, there is one thing that
determines the highest performance, and that is psychological safety,” Hagemann
said. “If the team knows it is psychologically safe — which [includes] the
reward cycle, the climate of appreciation, being respected and accepted — there
is a high predictability for high performance.
http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/the-leading-brain/?utm_source=kw_newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2017-05-11
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