Anticipation and Decision Making in Sport

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A. Mark Williams
action prediction
action simulation
anticipation
anxiety and decision-making
biases
brain function
brain plasticity
brain structure
Category=JMR
Category=SCGP
CI Effect
coach behaviours
cognitive psychology
creativity and decision-making
deception
decision-making
decision-making by match officials
disguise
emotion and perception
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
eq_sports-fitness
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expert decision maker's brain
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expert perceptual judgements
expert performance
familiarity detection
Fast Ball Sports
Field Hockey
game intelligence
Handball Throw
Kinematic Cues
Novice Boxers
pattern perception
perception
Perceptual Cognitive Expertise
Perceptual Cognitive Skills
Perceptual Cognitive Training
performance analysis
peripheral vision
Point Light Displays
Postural Cues
Push Task
Quiet Eye Period
reaction
Reinvestment Theory
Robin Jackson
Secondary Motor Task
Skilled Batters
Soccer Penalty Kick
Spatial Occlusion
sport psychology
Tactical Creativity
Temporal Occlusion
Temporal Occlusion Paradigm
training programs
training under pressure
Vice Versa
virtual environments
visual pivots
Visual Search Behaviour
visual search behaviours
Visual Search Strategies

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138504837
  • Weight: 950g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Feb 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The ability to anticipate and make accurate decisions in a timely manner is fundamental to high-level performance in sport. This is the first book to identify the underlying science behind anticipation and decision making in sport, enhancing our scientific understanding of these phenomena and helping practitioners to develop interventions to facilitate the more rapid acquisition of the perceptual-cognitive skills that underpin these judgements.

Adopting a multidisciplinary approach — encompassing research from psychology, biomechanics, neuroscience, physiology, computing science, and performance analysis — the book is divided into three sections. The first section provides a comprehensive analysis of the processes and mechanisms underpinning anticipation and skilled perception in sport. In the second section, the focus shifts towards exploring the science of decision making in sport. The final section is more applied, outlining how the key skills that impact on anticipation and decision making may be facilitated through various training interventions.

With chapters written by leading experts from a vast range of countries and continents, no other book offers such a synthesis of the historical development of the field, contemporary research, and future areas for investigation in anticipation and decision making in sport. This is a fascinating and important text for students and researchers in sport psychology, skill acquisition, expert performance, motor learning, motor behaviour, and coaching science, as well as practicing coaches from any sport.

A. Mark Williams is Chair of Health, Kinesiology, and Recreation at the University of Utah, USA. His research interests focus on the neural and psychological mechanisms underpinning the acquisition and development of expertise, with a particular focus on anticipation and decision making. He has published more than 200 journal articles in peer-reviewed outlets and written more than 80 book chapters. He has co-authored and edited 15 books and delivered more than 200 keynote and invited lectures in over 30 countries. He is a Fellow of the European College of Sports Science, the British Association of Sport and Exercise Science, the National Academy of Kinesiology, and the British Psychological Society. He is Editor-in-Chief of several academic journals.

Robin C. Jackson is Senior Lecturer in Sport Psychology at Loughborough University, UK. His research on perceptual-cognitive expertise focusses on attentional processes in sports performance, notably in regard to anticipation and the perception of deceptive intent. He is also interested in the implications of this research for designing training protocols to develop skills that are robust under pressure. He has more than 50 peer-reviewed papers and book chapters. He is a founding member of the British Psychological Society’s Division of Sport and Exercise Psychology, and the Expertise and Skill Acquisition Network special interest group. He serves on the editorial board for several sport psychology journals and is Executive Editor of the Journal of Sports Sciences (Social and Behavioural Sciences).