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Speed of expertise acquisition depends upon inherited factors

This paper challenges the current dominant view of expertise acquisition by reintroducing inherited factors in the learning process. Studies in experimental psychology have consistently shown that expert performance correlates with the amount of domain-specific knowledge that the experts have acquired through practice. This finding has led to the view that nurture dominates nature with respect to expertise acquisition. We review studies in neurobiology that have shown that the biological processes underlying long-term memory storage engage genetic mechanisms. Thereby, we lay out a framework that provides the basis for reinterpreting psychological data in a psychobiological light. We advance a genetic hypothesis which accounts for individual differences in expertise acquisition. We briefly discuss the consequences of our hypothesis on education.
© Copyright 2010 Talent Development & Excellence. International Research Association for Talent Development and Excellence. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:biological and medical sciences junior sports social sciences
Published in:Talent Development & Excellence
Language:English
Published: 2010
Online Access:https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Speed-of-Expertise-Acquisition-Depends-upon-Factors-Chassy-Gobet/d18c0bda523d9c14939c8675de932f55122c5a92
Volume:2
Issue:1
Pages:17-27
Document types:article
Level:advanced