The effects of baseball experience on movement initiation in catching fly balls.

Previous research has shown that skilled athletes are able to respond faster than novices to skill-specific information. The aim of this study was to ascertain whether expert outfielders are faster than non-experts in acting on information about the flight of a fly ball. It was hypothesized that expert outfielders are better attuned to this information; as a result, faster and more accurate responses were expected. This hypothesis was tested by having non-expert and expert outfielders judge, as quickly as possible, where a ball would land in the front-behind dimension (perceptual condition) and, in another condition, to attempt to catch such balls (catching condition). The results of the perceptual condition do not support the hypothesis that expert outfielders are more sensitive to ball flight information than non-experts, but the results of the catching condition reveal that experts are more likely to initiate locomotion in the correct direction.

[1]  P. J. Brancazio Looking into Chapman’s homer: The physics of judging a fly ball , 1985 .

[2]  Claire F. Michaels,et al.  The optics and actions of catching fly balls , 1992 .

[3]  J T Todd,et al.  Visual information about moving objects. , 1981, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[4]  Seville Chapman Catching a Baseball , 1968 .

[5]  G. Keppel,et al.  Design and Analysis: A Researcher's Handbook , 1976 .

[6]  F. C. Bakker,et al.  Catching balls: how to get the hand to the right place at the right time. , 1994, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[7]  Bruce Abernethy,et al.  The nature of expertise in sport , 1994 .

[8]  B. Abernethy,et al.  Expert-novice differences in an applied selective attention task. , 1987 .

[9]  J. Tresilian Study of a Servo-control Strategy for Projectile Interception , 1995 .

[10]  J L Dannemiller,et al.  Role of image acceleration in judging landing location of free-falling projectiles. , 1993, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[11]  John F. Schmerler The Visual Perception of Accelerated Motion , 1976, Perception.

[12]  L. Youngen A Comparison of Reaction and Movement Times of Women Athletes and Nonathletes , 1959 .

[13]  M K Kaiser,et al.  How baseball outfielders determine where to run to catch fly balls. , 1995, Science.

[14]  J. Gibson The Senses Considered As Perceptual Systems , 1967 .

[15]  M K Kaiser,et al.  Visual acceleration detection: Effect of sign and motion orientation , 1989, Perception & psychophysics.

[16]  B. Abernethy,et al.  Anticipation in squash: differences in advance cue utilization between expert and novice players. , 1990, Journal of sports sciences.

[17]  H. Whiting,et al.  The effects of personality and ability on speed of decisions regarding the directional aspects of ball flight. , 1972, Journal of motor behavior.

[18]  P. McLeod,et al.  Running to catch the ball , 1993, Nature.

[19]  B. Abernethy Visual search strategies and decision-making in sport. , 1991 .

[20]  C. M. Jones,et al.  Use of advance cues in predicting the flight of a lawn tennis ball , 1978 .

[21]  G. Montagne,et al.  Visual information pick-up in ball-catching , 1993 .