Abstract
How do athletes represent actions from their sport? How are these representations structured and which knowledge is shared among experts in the same discipline? To address these questions, the event segmentation task was used. Experts in Taekwondo and novices indicated how they would subjectively split videos of Taekwondo form sequences into meaningful units. In previous research, this procedure was shown to unveil the structure of internal action representations and to be affected by sensorimotor knowledge. Without specific instructions on the grain size of segmentation, experts tended to integrate over longer episodes which resulted in a lower number of single units. Moreover, in accordance with studies in figure-skating and basketball, we expected higher agreement among experts on where to place segmentation marks, i.e., boundaries. In line with this hypothesis, significantly more overlap of boundaries was found within the expert group as compared to the control group. This was observed even though the interindividual differences in the selected grain size were huge and expertise had no systematic influence here. The absence of obvious goals or objects to structure Taekwondo forms underlines the importance of shared expert knowledge. Further, experts might have benefited from sensorimotor skills which allowed to simulate the observed actions more precisely. Both aspects may explain stronger agreement among experts even in unfamiliar Taekwondo forms. These interpretations are descriptively supported by the participants’ statements about features which guided segmentation and by an overlap of the group’s agreed boundaries with those of an experienced referee. The study shows that action segmentation can be used to provide insights into structure and content of action representations specific to experts. The mechanisms underlying shared knowledge among Taekwondoists and among experts in general are discussed on the background of current theoretic frameworks.
Highlights
Athletic performance is built on and might even extend the embodied representation of action (Beilock et al, 2008; Debarnot et al, 2014)
the group of experts agreed on more boundaries than the novices
The exact superimposition of the experts' responses in particular bins points to the use of predictive mechanisms based on sensorimotor representations
Summary
Athletic performance is built on and might even extend the embodied representation of action (Beilock et al, 2008; Debarnot et al, 2014). For the visual domain, it has been frequently shown that athletes excel at tasks that require discriminating and predicting the actions from their own sport (Abernethy and Zawi, 2007; Smith, 2016). This is due to visual familiarity that results from countless times observing others during their sport but is supported by experience with the motor programs in addition (Aglioti et al, 2008; Mulligan et al, 2016). The interaction between perception and action might be tightened by plastic changes in the sensorimotor system which correlate with motor skill achievement (Hänggi et al, 2010; Wenger et al, 2017)
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