In research: The term has become fairly common in psychiatric research, used in the following manner: "Neuropsychological findings in obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) have been explained in terms of
reduced cognitive shifting ability as a result of low levels of frontal inhibitory activity."
In therapy: In therapy (as in the work of Steven Hayes and associates), a client is taught first to identify and accept a negative thought or attitude, and then to allow the cognitive shifting process to re-direct attention away from the negative fixation, toward a chosen aim or goal that is more positive—thus the "accept and choose act" from whence comes the ACT therapy name. Cognitive studies of the elderly refer to "...Impaired cognitive shifting in Parkinsonian patients on anticholinergic therapy..." etc.
Everyday usage: Books such as
The Way Of The Tiger by
Lance Secretan, and
The Creative Manager by Peter Russell have suggested how cognitive shifting principles apply to everyday life. Decades ago
Rollo May taught the process of conscious choosing and cognitive shifting at Princeton in his psychology lectures. And in books such as
The Emotional Brain,
Joseph LeDoux attempted to clarify the power of consciously shifting from a negative to a more positive emotional focus. In John Selby's writings, most notable in
Quiet Your Mind, the term appears frequently.
In meditation: Among the first references to the general mental process of focal shifting or cognitive shifting (the term cognitive is a relatively new term), the Hindu
Upanishads are probably the first written documentation of the meditative process of redirecting one's focus of attention in particular disciplined directions. Cognitive shifting is the core process of all meditation, especially in
Kundalini meditation but also in
Zen meditation and even in
Christian mysticism where the mind's attention is re-directed (or shifted) toward particular theologically-determined focal points. Recent books have spoken directly of cognitive shifting as a meditative procedure. ==Specific term roots==