How do elite performers organize their nervous system to maintain decision quality under maximum pressure? What is the architecture of reference signals that allows a competitive tennis player to execute precise shots when the match is on the line?
Practice-Generated Research (PGR) — a rigorous scientific approach that turns active practice into publishable research. I am simultaneously the researcher and the subject, generating systematic data through competitive tennis performance while formalizing findings through the Control Loop Framework.
Phase 3 of Study 001 is active, with return to competitive tennis imminent. Study 002 is transitioning into focus as new findings emerge around constraint saturation, recovery mechanisms, and the internalization sequence.
The moment when external pressure exceeds the performer's capacity to maintain reference signal organization. The edge where the nervous system must reorganize or fail.
The mechanism by which a performer moves from conscious control to embodied automaticity. The moment when learning becomes performance.
A state of heightened perceptual organization where the performer operates at the edge of their capacity. Maximum sensitivity, maximum precision, maximum risk.
A reference signal architecture organized around environmental communion rather than opposition. The performer as part of the system, not separate from it.