Cognitive interference can reduce climbing performance by dividing attention between movement execution and other mental processes. In practice, this often shows up as hesitation, inconsistent sequencing, or inefficient movement choices under pressure.
While cognitive load cannot be fully eliminated, attention can be trained. The following exercises are designed to improve focus, reduce unnecessary decision-making during climbing, and support more stable movement execution. They target the transition from conscious control to more automatic, fluent movement patterns often associated with “flow”.
1. Single-Intent Climbing (Constraint Focus)
This exercise reduces cognitive load by limiting attention to one movement variable at a time.
How to do it:
- Choose a boulder problem well below your limit
- Before starting, select one single focus:
- quiet feet
- hip position relative to the wall
- straight-arm usage
- Climb the problem while maintaining only that focus
Key constraint:
Do not add additional technical goals during the attempt.
Purpose:
This reduces attentional switching and helps isolate specific movement patterns without overloading working memory.
2. Pre-Movement Rehearsal (Route Encoding)
This drill shifts cognitive effort from execution time to preparation time.
How to do it:
- Observe the boulder from the ground without climbing
- Mentally rehearse the full sequence once or twice
- Identify:
- key body positions
- major transitions or crux moves
- rest positions or pauses
- Execute the climb with minimal re-analysis during movement
Key constraint:
Avoid re-planning mid-attempt unless absolutely necessary.
Purpose:
Improves planning efficiency and reduces in-route decision-making, which can otherwise fragment attention during execution.
3. Repetition for Flow Stabilisation
Flow in climbing is strongly associated with reduced self-monitoring and smoother motor execution. One way to encourage this is through repeated exposure to the same movement pattern under stable conditions.
How to do it:
- Select 3–4 benchmark boulder problems at a submaximal grade
- Repeat them multiple times within the same session
- Focus on:
- consistent rhythm through sequences
- reduced hesitation between moves
- smoother transitions rather than maximal effort
Key constraint:
Do not modify beta between attempts unless necessary for safety or feasibility.
Purpose:
Repetition reduces cognitive variability between attempts and supports the gradual automation of movement sequences.

Summary
These exercises aim to reduce unnecessary cognitive interference during climbing by structuring attention more effectively. Instead of trying to “think less,” the goal is to control what you think about, and when you think about it.
Sources
- Tod, D. A., Iredale, F., McGuigan, M. R., Strange, D. E., & Gill, N. (2005). “Psyching-up” enhances force production during the bench press exercise. Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, 19(3), 599–603.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16095409/ - Tod, D. A., Iredale, F., McGuigan, M. R., Strange, D. E., & Gill, N. (2005). “Psyching-up” enhances force production during the bench press exercise. Aberystwyth University Research Portal (full publication record and abstract).
https://research.aber.ac.uk/en/publications/psyching-up-enhances-force-production-during-the-bench-press-exer/ - Blakely, A. W., et al. (2021). The effect of dual-tasking on rock climbing performance.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33838432/ - Dergipark (n.d.). Effects of attentional interference on climbing performance.
https://dergipark.org.tr/en/pub/psbd/article/219227
