Top Banner
AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual-motor contributions to elite performance
17

AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual- motor contributions to elite performance.

Jan 14, 2016

Download

Documents

Barbara Ray
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual- motor contributions to elite performance.

AIS Chapter 15perceptual-cognitive and perceptual-motor

contributions to elite performance

Page 2: AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual- motor contributions to elite performance.

Anticipating movement and measurement

• Crucial in ball sports, combat sports• Require predetermined sequence of skill execution• Temporal occlusion measurement approach– Competition situations filmed and selectively edited to

provide different amounts of information– Participants required to predict the opponent’s action– The point of significant change in prediction accuracy – Elite players pick up predictive movement pattern info

from earlier time-windows than sub-elite players

Page 3: AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual- motor contributions to elite performance.

Temporal occlusion measurement

Page 4: AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual- motor contributions to elite performance.

Anticipating movement and measurement

• Visual search measurement– Record eye movements to real/similar competitions–Most informative features of opponent’s action that

may be used for anticipatory purposes– Visual search pattern– Small difference between elite and sub-elite players,

can not alone explain information processing difference

Page 5: AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual- motor contributions to elite performance.

Anticipating movement and measurement

• Reactive agility measurement– Respond to near life-size video image of

competitions– Agility time, decision making time– Slower than planned agility test– Significant difference in decision-making time

between elite and sub-elite players• Elite: -149 ms• Sub-elite 22 ms

Page 6: AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual- motor contributions to elite performance.

Recognizing typical patterns of play

• Sport-specific tests of pattern recognition and recall– View a film of typical competition pattern– Recall attach/defense situation in blank template– Elite players recall better

• More sophisticated domain-specific knowledge structures, chunks (一團 , 一組 )– Stored and retrieved efficiently from long-term memory– Advantage in anticipation and decision-making

• Link between anticipation and pattern recall still unclear

Page 7: AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual- motor contributions to elite performance.
Page 8: AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual- motor contributions to elite performance.

Decision-making skills

• How an athlete elects to use the perceptual information picked up in the environment, to select a response option

• Usually measured by film occlusion techniques, using game-specific videos

• Measure eye movement patterns– Elite athletes more efficient visual search strategy,

few fixations, shorter duration in specific areas– Focus on key defender and ‘free’ space– ↑Eye fixation, ↓duration of each fixation in more

complex situations

Page 9: AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual- motor contributions to elite performance.
Page 10: AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual- motor contributions to elite performance.

Elite athletes have superior generic visual ability?

• Elite athletes may have better dynamic visual acuity, wider visual field, superior recognition of peripheral targets

• Differences are SMALL– NOT contribute to prediction of expertise

• Expert and novice athletes are not characterized by differences in basic visual function

Page 11: AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual- motor contributions to elite performance.

訊息處理理論基礎

Page 12: AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual- motor contributions to elite performance.

反應時間定義

Page 13: AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual- motor contributions to elite performance.

Capacity to dual task

• Capacity to execute primary skills more proficiently– Important, but difficult to measure

• Athletes required to simultaneously process many information WHILE executing the skills

• Dual-task test– Primary task for which attention demand is assessed,

usually core skill of the sport– Secondary task for which the performance changes are

measured– Example: 2 vs 2 decision making (primary) and single-

choice vocal reaction time test (secondary)

Page 14: AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual- motor contributions to elite performance.

Capacity to dual task

• Elite athletes perform better in dual-task test, even though similar performance in single-task– Automated the control of primary skill– Has spare attentional capacity to devote to

secondary task

Page 15: AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual- motor contributions to elite performance.
Page 16: AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual- motor contributions to elite performance.

Conclusions

• Pattern recall, decision-making , reaction time and pass accuracy in dual-task, are strong predictors of elite netball players

• Task representativeness: test protocol closely represent the real competitions– Non-specific tasks reduce or completely remove

elite athletes advantage

Page 17: AIS Chapter 15 perceptual-cognitive and perceptual- motor contributions to elite performance.