Human Performance 360 Episode 04 | The Power of Self-Efficacy: Believing You Can — Before You Act (Podcast with Dr. Feltz, Pioneer in Self-Efficacy Research in Sport)
21 February 2026

Human Performance 360 Episode 04 | The Power of Self-Efficacy: Believing You Can — Before You Act (Podcast with Dr. Feltz, Pioneer in Self-Efficacy Research in Sport)

Professor P with Dr.Peykar

About

What separates two equally talented performers under pressure?


Often, it’s not skill.
It’s not preparation.
It’s belief.


In this episode of Human Performance 360, Dr. Parsa Peykar sits down with Deborah Feltz, distinguished professor at Michigan State University and one of the foremost authorities on self-efficacy in sport and exercise psychology.


Building on the foundational work of Albert Bandura, Dr. Feltz has spent decades researching how belief influences performance — from individual athletes to entire teams.


Together, we explore:


What self-efficacy truly is — and how it differs from confidence or self-esteem


The four scientifically validated sources of belief


How athletes can use failure to strengthen — not weaken — efficacy


The role of physiological interpretation (nerves, adrenaline, fatigue) in performance


Coaching efficacy — and how a leader’s belief shapes team outcomes


The difference between calibrated confidence and dangerous over-belief


How self-efficacy applies beyond sport — into leadership, entrepreneurship, and life


This episode moves beyond motivational language and into evidence-based performance science.


You’ll learn why self-efficacy predicts:


Effort


Persistence


Emotional regulation


Resilience under pressure


And ultimately, results


Whether you’re an athlete, coach, executive, student, or creator — this conversation will challenge you to examine a powerful question:


Where is your belief coming from — and is it strong enough to support your next level?



🔥 Reflection Prompt

Think of one area in your life where you hesitate — not because you lack skill, but because you lack belief.


What would change if you acted as if you could?