Literature DB >> 15012483

Expert and exceptional performance: evidence of maximal adaptation to task constraints.

K A Ericsson1, A C Lehmann.   

Abstract

Expert and exceptional performance are shown to be mediated by cognitive and perceptual-motor skills and by domain-specific physiological and anatomical adaptations. The highest levels of human performance in different domains can only be attained after around ten years of extended, daily amounts of deliberate practice activities. Laboratory analyses of expert performance in many domains such as chess, medicine, auditing, computer programming, bridge, physics, sports, typing, juggling, dance, and music reveal maximal adaptations of experts to domain-specific constraints. For example, acquired anticipatory skills circumvent general limits on reaction time, and distinctive memory skills allow a domain-specific expansion of working memory capacity to support planning, reasoning, and evaluation. Many of the mechanisms of superior expert performance serve the dual purpose of mediating experts' current performance and of allowing continued improvement of this performance in response to informative feedback during practice activities.

Entities:  

Year:  1996        PMID: 15012483     DOI: 10.1146/annurev.psych.47.1.273

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Annu Rev Psychol        ISSN: 0066-4308            Impact factor:   24.137


  119 in total

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8.  Cognitive Expertise: An ALE Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  Nicola Neumann; Martin Lotze; Simon B Eickhoff
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9.  Accuracy is in the eyes of the pathologist: The visual interpretive process and diagnostic accuracy with digital whole slide images.

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Review 10.  Flight nursing expertise: towards a middle-range theory.

Authors:  Andrew P Reimer; Shirley M Moore
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