With a cursory google search, I couldn't find the actual scholarly articles. But if you're willing to trust the 2 sources below....
Although visualization was regarded as "new age hype" for many years, research has shown that there is a strong scientific basis for how and why visualization works. It is now a well-known fact that we stimulate the same brain regions when we visualize an action and when we actually perform that same action. For example, when you visualize lifting your right hand, it stimulates the same part of the brain that is activated when you actually lift your right hand.
Emphasis is my own.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/srinivasa ... 71340.html
According to Lynne McTaggart in her book The Intention Experiment, electromyography (EMG) has shown that the brain does not differentiate between the thought of an action and a real action.
It appears that just as when really performing an activity certain neural pathways are stimulated and chemicals produced, so when mentally imagining that same activity, the same physiological changes are present. Whether the activity is carried out in reality or is imagined, it appears that the neural pathways are strengthened.
Emphasis is my own.
https://suite101.com/a/what-happens-in- ... on-a168879
See why guys can get addicted to a woman (i.e., Shopping Guy)? If you fantasize about her, sex with her, and marrying her over and over, you're strengthening the
same neural network! See why guys can get addicted to porn? See why depression and self-defeatism can be an endless cycle?
Your brain just doesn't give a
shit. It's the same stuff! At least according to neuroscience.
And from that same 2nd article, they discuss how to visualize properly:
Pillay states that by giving the posterior parietal cortex too much information at once through visualization, it becomes overloaded. He suggests therefore that whatever one is visualizing may need to be broken down into stages so that the posterior parietal cortex can digest the information.
Getting The Most Out of Visualization
In order to make visualization practice as beneficial as possible, it appears that honouring the neurology behind it is worth bearing in mind. This means getting to the point of being able to visualize oneself as if actually engaged in the desired activity in order to develop the neurological pathways. Breaking visualizations down into stages if necessary will ensure that the part of the brain that assists in planning a route to achievement, will not be overwhelmed with too much data.
Therefore, do it in stages. Do it in the NOW, not past/future. Make it positive using active voice (e.g., "I am winning the race now" instead of "I was not losing"). Here's an example, following each step.
1.) Imagine the love of your life is standing right next to you, right now, looking at you lovingly. How do you feel?
2.) Now imagine what her eyes look like. Your eyes are locked with each other. How do you feel? What do they look like?
3.) Now imagine what her hair looks like. How it falls down upon her shoulders and around her head. How the light hits it. How it smells. How it straightens or curls or twists or bounces.
4.) Now imagine the complexion of her skin. Is she creamy or caramel or something else? Imagine the softness of it. Imagine every bump, every wrinkle, every inch. Your eyes are feasting upon the complexion of her face. How do you feel?
5.) Now imagine her lips. She's giving you that warm smile that she only gives you. The curves of her lips are pointing up. Her eyes are squinting. Her cheeks are wrinkling. She's staring at you. How do you feel?
6.) Now imagine her entire body standing there before, just inches away. She's close enough for you to hear her breathing in the dead silence. This is the love of your life, right next to you.
7.) You can now read her thoughts, her personality, her mind. She is the perfect woman! What is her personality like? What is she thinking? Is she thoughtful, kind, compassionate? Is she outgoing, friendly, adventurous? How does this make you feel?
8.) Now, speak to her. What do you want to say to her? This is the moment. This is your chance. Now.
Now, do this same visualization with a complete stranger that is utterly breathtaking! You can build each step. You're at some coffee joint. You see her. Then visualize yourself as a confident, sexy man. You are a confident, sexy man now, and you are in the coffee joint
now. You are a fucking hot man. Fear doesn't control you. Death doesn't even control you. You ask every women out, no matter what.
So in this case, I think it can help with approach anxiety
My two cents,
PN