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Timing of in situ visual information pick-up that differentiates expert and near-expert anticipation in a complex motor skill

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 14:47 authored by Simon Rosalie, Sean Müller
The timing of visual information pick-up for visual anticipation was examined by comparing the capability of multiple skill groups, expert and near-expert karate athletes and novices, to block attacks using an in situ temporal occlusion paradigm. Participants stood facing a karate opponent and then attempted to block attacks (kicks and punches), whilst their vision of attacks was occluded: (a) prior to onset of opponent motion (O1), (b) after preparatory head movement (O2), and (c) after initiation of the attacking motion (O3). A no occlusion control condition provided complete vision of attacks (O4). Results revealed that expert anticipation was not significantly different to that of near-experts at O1, but was significantly different to the other group across O2-O4. Expert anticipation, however, was significantly above chance across all occlusion conditions, but near-experts performed above chance at O3 and O4, whilst novices were better than chance at O4. Unexpectedly, unique evidence was found that expert anticipation could be differentiated from near-expert anticipation in the earliest occlusion condition, where it was found that only experts were capable of using visual information from a static opponent to anticipate and block attacks above chance. The findings further understanding of expert visual anticipation to guide motor skills beyond existing expert-novice comparisons.

History

Journal

Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology

Volume

66

Issue

10

Start page

1951

End page

1962

Total pages

12

Publisher

Routledge

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2013 The Experimental Psychology Society

Former Identifier

2006045800

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-01-19

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