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Michael Lardon : ウィキペディア英語版 | Michael Lardon
Michael Theodore Lardon is considered among the country’s most prominent sport psychiatrists.〔( How athletes find the zone, Jon Wertheim )〕 Lardon is an Associate Clinical Professor at the University of California at San Diego School of Medicine, and is the author of two books, "Mastering Golf's Mental Game" (Random House 2014) 〔(Mastering Golf's Mental Game ) Random House 2014〕 and "Finding Your Zone: 10 Core Lessons for Peak Performance in Sports and Life" (Penguin 2008).〔(Finding Your Zone: 10 Core Lessons for Peak Performance in Sports and Life (Penguin 2008) )〕 == Early life ==
A former United States Table Tennis Junior Champion,〔(USA Table Tennis - USATT Hall of Fame - Scott Boggan )〕 as well the 1981 United States National Sports Festival gold medalist in mixed doubles table tennis,〔1〕 Lardon attended Stanford University, where he studied psychology. Lardon’s senior research paper for Professor Albert Bandura (Social learning theory) was on mental visualization in the context of human peak performance. He also was a teaching assistant for Dr. Philip Zimbardo (Principal investigator of the Stanford Prison Study), Dr. Robert Ornstein (Author of the "Psychology of Consciousness") and for Dr. Stephen LaBerge, a leader in the scientific study of lucid dreaming. In 1985, Lardon received his Bachelor of Arts in Psychology. In 1990, Lardon completed his internship in internal medicine at St. Mary’s Hospital in Long Beach, CA (a UCLA affiliate hospital) after graduating medical school in 1989 from the University of Texas medical branch at Galveston.〔1〕 In 1994, he won the UCSD Department of Psychiatry Judd (Louis Judd, Past Chairman, National Institute of Mental Health) Research Award for his work on the neuroelectric assessment of enhanced athletic peak performance. In August 1994, this research was awarded grant funding by the United States Tennis Association by the administrator of sports science, E. Paul Roetert, Ph.D. During his psychiatry residency training at UCSD he caddied for his brother Brad Lardon in the finals of the PGA Tour Qualifying School in La Quinta, CA. His experience was first chronicled in John Feinstein’s best selling book, "A Good Walk Spoiled" and later in the January 1995 issue of Golf Magazine where he read his brother’s final putt to determine if Brad Lardon would earn fully exempt status on the PGA Tour. Lardon under-read the putt but his brother hit it too hard, taking the break out of it and the ball hit the back of the cup, bounced straight up and fell back in giving Brad Lardon his second fully exempt year on the PGA Tour.
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