Shahzad Tahmasebi Boroujeni; Fariba Hasan barani; Elham Hatamishahmiri
Abstract
Perceptual-motor skills play a vital role in many tasks of daily life and sports skills. The measurement of coincidence anticipation timing ability is a method to evaluate perceptual and perceptual-motor skills. Thus, the main aim of the present study was to investigate the role of different ...
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Perceptual-motor skills play a vital role in many tasks of daily life and sports skills. The measurement of coincidence anticipation timing ability is a method to evaluate perceptual and perceptual-motor skills. Thus, the main aim of the present study was to investigate the role of different organism, task and environment constraints in coincidence anticipation timing accuracy. For this purpose, 30 female adolescents (17-15 years old), young (20-40 years old) and elderly (60-80 years old) participated in 4 tests of coincidence anticipation timing. The tests included a coincidence anticipation timing task with green (1), blue (2), red (3) color background and an additional environment constraint (4) and participants had to coincide with the arrival of the stimulus in the target point and press the corresponding key. For data analysis, mixed ANOVA (3*4), 4 one-way ANOVA and 3 ANOVA with repeated measures were used for each group with adjusted Bonferroni. Statistical analysis showed a significant difference in test 1, 3 and 4 (P≤0.0125). Also, all groups showed a significant reduction in performance when the background color changed from green to red and the addition of the secondary task (P≤0.017). In addition, results indicated that the elderly group had the weakest performance compared with the adolescent and young groups and the reason might be a weakness in perceptual-motor systems related to age increase. Finally, different coincidence anticipation training programs were recommended for athletes, elderly and patients with perceptual-motor system weakness.
Fariba Hasan Barani; Behrooz Abdoli; Shaghayegh Modaberi
Abstract
Recently, researches on motor learning have illustrated that learning with effortless process supports learning under psychological stress. Also, contextual interference and practice specificity theories are among those theories which investigate desired practice conditions. The current study aimed at ...
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Recently, researches on motor learning have illustrated that learning with effortless process supports learning under psychological stress. Also, contextual interference and practice specificity theories are among those theories which investigate desired practice conditions. The current study aimed at identifying cognitive effort and effortless process based on contextual interference and practice specificity theories. 30 participants were randomly divided into three groups of specificity, random and serial. After the pretest, groups practiced the throwing task for three days. After two transfer tests, subjects were asked to write down the verbal protocol with all details. The results of combined analysis of variance test (3*3) (group*day) revealed the effect of performance progress in practice days and one-way ANOVA tests revealed a significant difference between specificity and random groups during 1 and 2 transfer tests (P˂0.017). It was concluded that specificity and random groups used effortless and implicit process; therefore, coaches and therapists are recommended to use these two methods to instruct motor skills.