There are different types of cognitive content. Table 1 contains a list of commonly used categories of cognitive content. Unfortunately, there is no standardized, generally accepted system of categories for cognitive content. Most, like those found in Table 1, are redundant, incomplete, and lack validity. Nonetheless, the categories can be useful. The cognitive content of the baseball players described previously might be categorized as locus of control (“I’ll have to get lucky here), emotional stability (increased anxiety and tightening up), sport knowledge (pattern of pitches thrown in the game) and problem solving (estimate of types of pitches).
Table 1 - Example of categories of cognitive content
Knowledge
Computer science
Philosophy and religion
Social sciences
Languages
Science and mathematics
Technology and applied science
Arts and recreation
Literature
History and geography
Leadership and management skills
Strategic thinking
Innovation
Business acumen
Negotiating
Problem solving
Decision making
Time management
Oral and written communication
Social-cognitive personal attributes
Self-efficacy
Locus of control
Goal orientation
Goal setting
Self-monitoring
Trait-based personal attributes
Honesty
Emotional stability
Conscientiousness
Agreeableness
Self-confidence
Intellectual skills
Reading comprehension
Verbal ability
Spatial reasoning
Inductive and deductive reasoning
In summary, peak performers are good at defining the drivers or causes of success. That is, they understand and identify two things, (1) the tasks and sub-tasks that must be performed expertly to achieve peak performance and (2) the cognitive content required to perform the tasks and sub-tasks successfully. While their understanding may be imperfect they achieve a sufficiently comprehensive and accurate understanding of task and cognitive analysis to enable them to proceed successfully to the next step in achieving peak performance.
For most peak performers, the drivers of success that guide their actions is tacit knowledge, that is, it is difficult or impossible to share. However, thanks to the efforts of psychologists in the past fifteen years, progress has been made in understanding and identifying the causes of success and the process to discover it – task and cognitive analysis. It is now possible to make explicit and to measure and teach what has in the past been largely implicit, unmeasured-able, and unteachable.
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