| Literature DB >> 29951013 |
Georgina Vernon1, Damian Farrow1,2, Machar Reid2.
Abstract
Research has largely focused on the individual contribution of either kinematic or contextual information sources to the anticipatory skill of an expert athlete during a time-stressed situation. Very little research has considered how these two sources of information interact with each other to influence anticipation. The current study used a qualitative interview methodology to investigate this interaction. Eight former or current top 250 professional male tennis players participated in a 30-60 min interview about the interaction of kinematic and contextual information sources and their influence on anticipation. Using an open-coding analysis approach, codes were identified by each researcher from the transcribed interviews and then brought together to identify common themes. The primary themes were consciousness, tactical awareness, contextual information sources, kinematic information sources, mentality/confidence, returner technique or strategy, and build pressure on the server. Secondary themes coded from the participants were returning characteristics and practice. Consequently, a temporal model was developed which demonstrated the sequence and interaction of both kinematic and contextual information sources known to influence expert tennis player's anticipation.Entities:
Keywords: anticipation; decision making; performance psychology; sport expertise; tennis
Year: 2018 PMID: 29951013 PMCID: PMC6008562 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00895
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Interview guide for participant interview questions.
| Q1 | Can you think of examples of past or present players who are/were good returners? |
| Q2 | When you were returning, did you consider contextual information (e.g., score, court side, handedness, wind etc.) to help predict an opponent serve when competing? |
| Q3 | What role did kinematic information (e.g., ball toss, trunk rotation, head position etc.) play in helping you anticipate or predict the serve? Was it more important than the contextual information? Why? |
| Q4 | If you utilized such contextual information how did you update it over the course of a match? For example, how many times did a player have to serve to the same spot on big points before you considered this a trend and adjusted your response accordingly? |
| Q5 | Today, we have asked you to think back to when you played. Now that you’re more involved in coaching, has your thinking or philosophy regarding what factors are important on the return changed at all? |
| Q6 | Given the role of the return in tennis, can you comment on how it is practiced? |
| Q7 | Anything else you would like to add about the return of serve and what we have covered today? |
Nine higher order themes and the corresponding lower order themes resulting from return of serve anticipation interviews.
| Higher order theme | Lower order themes |
|---|---|
| Consciousness | |
| Tactical awareness | |
| Contextual information sources | |
| Kinematic information sources | |
| Mentality/confidence | |
| Returner technique/strategy | |
| Build pressure on server | |
| Returning characteristics | |
| Practice |