The contribution of perceptual and cognitive skills in anticipation performance of elite and non-elite soccer players

The purpose of the present study is to examine the contribution of perceptual and cognitive processes in anticipation performance of soccer players under low- and high-intensity exercise demands. Eight elite and eight non-elite players completed a soccer-specific protocol, while simultaneously viewing dynamic and realistic filmed simulations of a soccer game. Anticipation, gaze behaviours, and retrospective reports were assessed. Results indicated that elite players were more accurate in anticipation performance. Under low-intensity, gaze behaviours exhibited by elite players accounted for a significant association in performance, whereas non-elite performance was significant related with cognition and evaluation statements. Under high-intensity, evaluation and deep planning verbalizations had a significant influence on elite group performance; in contrast, cognition statements was the only process-tracing measure that contributed significantly with non-elite performance.These findings indicated that the superior performance of elite players was associated with the selectivity of the perceptual and cognitive resources according to low- and high-intensity demands, respectively.
© Copyright 2014 International Journal of Sports Science. Scientific & Academic Publishing. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:sport games
Published in:International Journal of Sports Science
Language:English
Published: 2014
Online Access:http://article.sapub.org/10.5923.j.sports.20140405.01.html
Volume:4
Issue:5
Pages:143-151
Document types:article
Level:advanced