To be aware or not aware ? : what to think about while learning and performance a motor skill.

Auteur(s)
Singer, R.N. Lidor, R. & Cauraugh, J.H.
Jaar
Samenvatting

The effectiveness of three learning strategies on achievement was compared in the learning and performing of a self-paced motor task. More specifically, investigated was the influence of (a) an awarness strategy (to consciously attend to the act and to what one is doing during execution); (b) a nonawareness strategy (to preplan the movement and perform the task without conscious attention to it; "to just do it"); (c) the Five-Step Approach (to systematically ready oneself, image the act, focus attention on a cue, execute without thought, and evaluate the act and the previous steps); and (d) a control condition to use one's own approach). Subjects (N=72) received 250 trials to master a computer-managed ball-throwing task, and 50 more in a dual-taks situation. The Five-Step Approach and nonawareness strategies led to the highest achievement, and the three strategies resulted in less radial error in comparison to the control condition.

Publicatie aanvragen

2 + 0 =
Los deze eenvoudige rekenoefening op en voer het resultaat in. Bijvoorbeeld: voor 1+3, voer 4 in.

Publicatie

Bibliotheeknummer
930891 ST [electronic version only]
Uitgave

The Sport Psychologist, Vol. 7 (1993), No. 1 (March), p. 19-30, 37 ref.

Onze collectie

Deze publicatie behoort tot de overige publicaties die we naast de SWOV-publicaties in onze collectie hebben.