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Challenges to Cognitive Bases for an Especial Motor Skill at the Regulation Baseball Pitching Distance
28
Citations
19
References
2009
Year
Motor LearningNeuropsychologyMotor SkillCognitionMotor ControlSelf-efficacy DataSocial SciencesRegulation DistanceExpert Baseball PitchersKinesiologyCognitive DevelopmentSkilled PerformanceSport ScienceCognitive NeuroscienceMotor BehaviorHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceEspecial Motor SkillVisuomotor LearningExperimental PsychologyHigh-performance SportMotor SystemProcedural MemoryNeuroscienceHuman MovementAthletic Training
We tested expert baseball pitchers for evidence of especial skills at the regulation pitching distance. Seven college pitchers threw indoors to a target placed at 60.5 feet (18.44 m) and four closer and four further distances away. Accuracy at the regulation distance was significantly better than predicted by regression on the nonregulation distances (p < .02), indicating an especial skill effect emerged despite the absence of normal contextual cues. Self-efficacy data failed to support confidence as a mediating factor in especial skill effect. We concluded that cognitive theories fail to fully account for the patterns of observed data, and therefore theoretical explanations of the especial skills must address noncognitive aspects of motor learning and control.
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