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The relationship between visual attention and expertise in sports
Authors:Daniel Memmert  Daniel J Simons  Thorsten Grimme
Institution:1. Department of Physical Education, National Taiwan Normal University, No.162, Sec.1, Heping E. Rd., Da an Dist., Taipei City 106, Taiwan, Republic of China (R.O.C.);2. Graduate Institute of Sport Pedagogy, Taipei Physical Education College, No.101, Sec. 2, Zhongcheng Rd. Shilin Dist., Taipei City 111, Taiwan, Republic of China (R.O.C.);1. Applied Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong;2. Department of Rehabilitation Sciences, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
Abstract:ObjectivesGiven the prevalence of misperception and failed perception, particularly in attention-demanding team sports, surprisingly few studies have explored whether experts in team sports differ from other athletes and from non-athletes in their basic attention abilities.MethodIn this study, we examined group differences between experts in team handball (n = 40), athletes from non-team sports (n = 40), and novice athletes (n = 40) using a battery of three attention tasks: a functional field of view task, a multiple-object tracking task, and an inattentional blindness task.ResultsPerformance on the three attention tasks was largely independent, with no significant correlations among the tasks. Team sports experts showed no better performance on the basic attention tasks than did athletes from non-teams sports or novice athletes.ConclusionsThe finding that all basic attention tasks are largely independent provides preliminary support for the idea that attentional breadth, tracking performance, and inattentional blindness are distinct attentional processes. Our results demonstrate that sports expertise effects are unrelated to basic differences in attention—expertise does not appear to produce differences in basic attention and basic differences in attention do not appear to predict eventual expertise. Further experiments could focus on the ways in which more specific attentional strategies and processes contribute to sports performance.
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