Spatial and temporal adaptations that accompany increasing catching performance during learning

The authors studied changes in performance and kinematics during the acquisition of a 1-handed catch. Participants were 8 women who took an intensive 2-week training program during which they evolved from poor catchers to subexpert catchers. An increased temporal consistency, shift in spatial location of ball-hand contact away from the body, and higher peak velocity of the transport of the hand toward the ball accompanied their improvement in catching performance. Moreover, novice catchers first adjusted spatial characteristics of the catch to the task constraints and fine-tuned temporal features only later during learning. A principal components analysis on a large set of kinematic variables indicated that a successful catch depends on (a) forward displacement of the hand and (b) the dynamics of the hand closure, thereby providing a kinematic underpinning for the traditional transport-manipulation dissociation in the grasping and catching literature.
© Copyright 2007 Journal of Motor Behavior. Taylor & Francis, Heldref Publications. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:training science
Published in:Journal of Motor Behavior
Language:English
Published: 2007
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3200/JMBR.39.6.491-502
Volume:6
Issue:6
Pages:491-502
Document types:article
Level:intermediate