1. The key to success in elite athletes? Explicit and implicit motor learning in youth elite and non-elite soccer players.
- Author
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Verburgh, L., Scherder, E. J. A., van Lange, P. A. M., and Oosterlaan, J.
- Subjects
ABILITY ,AGE distribution ,ANALYSIS of variance ,ATHLETES ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,STATISTICAL correlation ,FISHER exact test ,INTELLIGENCE tests ,LEARNING strategies ,MOTOR ability ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REACTION time ,SOCCER ,STATISTICS ,SUCCESS ,VIDEO games ,TRAINING ,EFFECT sizes (Statistics) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHILDREN - Abstract
In sports, fast and accurate execution of movements is required. It has been shown that implicitly learned movements might be less vulnerable than explicitly learned movements to stressful and fast changing circumstances that exist at the elite sports level. The present study provides insight in explicit and implicit motor learning in youth soccer players with different expertise levels. Twenty-seven youth elite soccer players and 25 non-elite soccer players (aged 10–12) performed a serial reaction time task (SRTT). In the SRTT, one of the sequences must be learned explicitly, the other was implicitly learned. No main effect of group was found for implicit and explicit learning on mean reaction time (MRT) and accuracy. However, for MRT, an interaction was found between learning condition, learning phase and group. Analyses showed no group effects for the explicit learning condition, but youth elite soccer players showed better learning in the implicit learning condition. In particular, during implicit motor learning youth elite soccer showed faster MRTs in the early learning phase and earlier reached asymptote performance in terms of MRT. Present findings may be important for sports because children with superior implicit learning abilities in early learning phases may be able to learn more (durable) motor skills in a shorter time period as compared to other children. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
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