| Literature DB >> 27445879 |
Fabian Helm1, Mathias Reiser1, Jörn Munzert1.
Abstract
In our everyday environments, we are constantly having to adapt our behavior to changing conditions. Hence, processing information is a fundamental cognitive activity, especially the linking together of perceptual and action processes. In this context, expertise research in the sport domain has concentrated on arguing that superior processing performance is driven by an advantage to be found in anticipatory processes (see Williams et al., 2011, for a review). This has resulted in less attention being paid to the benefits coming from basic internal perceptual-motor processing. In general, research on reaction time (RT) indicates that practicing a RT task leads to an increase in processing speed (Mowbray and Rhoades, 1959; Rabbitt and Banerji, 1989). Against this background, the present study examined whether the speed of internal processing is dependent on or independent from domain-specific motor expertise in unpredictable stimulus-response tasks and in a double stimulus-response paradigm. Thirty male participants (15 team handball goalkeepers and 15 novices) performed domain-unspecific simple or choice stimulus-response (CSR) tasks as well as CSR tasks that were domain-specific only for goalkeepers. As expected, results showed significantly faster RTs for goalkeepers on domain-specific tasks, whereas novices' RTs were more frequently excessively long. However, differences between groups in the double stimulus-response paradigm were not significant. It is concluded that the reported expertise advantage might be due to recalling stored perceptual-motor representations for the domain-specific tasks, implying that experience with (practice of) a motor task explicitly enhances the internal processing of other related domain-specific tasks.Entities:
Keywords: action; cognition; expertise; perception; reaction times; sport; task specificity
Year: 2016 PMID: 27445879 PMCID: PMC4915076 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00882
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Average result pattern for basic S–R tasks: mean reaction times, parameters from fitting the ex-Gaussian PDF, and statistical results of within-subject and between-group effects.
| Experts, | Novices, | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SSR unspecific | 2CSR unspecific | 2CSR specific | 4CSR specific | SSR unspecific | 2CSR unspecific | 2CSR specific | 4CSR specific | Condition | Group | Condition × Group | |
| Mean RT | 192.7 (20.3) | 228.7 (24.0) | 218.4 (21.0) | 280.5 (25.6) | 213.3 (25.7) | 250.0 (28.6) | 258.9 (31.0) | 321.2 (29.6) | 132.73∗∗∗ | 18.0∗∗∗ | 2.56 |
| μ (mu)1 | 170.0 (18.0) | 196.6 (20.7) | 193.8 (24.6) | 242.6 (21.0) | 181.1 (20.0) | 206.6 (32.6) | 232.8 (37.5) | 279.1 (37.9) | 93.59∗∗∗ | 9.58∗∗ | 4.55∗ |
| σ (sigma)1 | 11.4 (6.9) | 20.1 (8.4) | 16.3 (8.6) | 14.8 (12.7) | 11.2 (8.0) | 19.6 (9.7) | 20.2 (8.2) | 29.8 (14.8) | 7.16∗∗ | 5.17∗ | 4.27∗ |
| τ (tau)1 | 22.6 (13.1) | 32.1 (14.5) | 24.6 (11.3) | 37.9 (12.1) | 32.2 (15.9) | 43.4 (19.6) | 26.0 (18.7) | 42.1 (12.8) | 11.43∗∗∗ | 2.74 | 1.13 |
Average result pattern for double SR task: mean reaction times, parameters from fitting the ex-Gaussian PDF, and statistical results of within-subject and between-group effects.
| Experts, | Novices, | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2CSR specific | Double SR RT2 | 2CSR specific | Double SR RT2 | Condition | Group | Condition × Group | |
| Mean RT | 218.4 (21.0) | 262.6 (69.0) | 258.9 (31.0) | 302.6 (82.8) | 10.40∗∗ | 6.53∗ | 0.00 |
| μ (mu)1 | 193.8 (24.6) | 233.4 (77.3) | 232.8 (37.5) | 267.7 (98.6) | 5.11∗ | 4.23∗ | 0.02 |
| σ (sigma)1 | 16.3 (8.6) | 41.8 (25.8) | 20.2 (8.2) | 56.4 (45.4) | 20.18∗∗∗ | 1.75 | 0.61 |
| τ (tau)1 | 24.6 (11.3) | 29.2 (23.6) | 26.0 (18.7) | 34.9 (39.5) | 0.99 | 0.31 | 0.10 |
Slowdown of reactions (RT1, 2CR) in the specific Double SR task: average values and statistical results of the comparison with the specific 2CSR task.
| Experts, | Novices, | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2CSR specific | Double SR RT1 | Double SR 2CR | 2CSR specific | Double SR RT1 | Double SR 2CR | Condition | Group | Condition × Group | |
| Mean RT | 218.4 (21.0) | 266.2 (35.5) | 244.3 (30.8) | 258.9 (31.0) | 292.1 (33.8) | 271.6 (27.7) | 31.96∗∗∗ | 11.03∗∗ | 1.26 |
| μ (mu)1 | 193.8 (24.6) | 240.7 (43.5) | 209.4 (37.6) | 232.8 (37.5) | 276.1 (37.9) | 239.1 (35.8) | 28.82∗∗∗ | 9.45∗∗ | 0.29 |