Publication | Closed Access
Contextual Interference Effects in Learning Three Badminton Serves
251
Citations
7
References
1986
Year
Motor LearningMotor SkillMotor ControlLanguage LearningContextual Interference InteractionSocial SciencesKinesiologySkilled PerformanceContextual Interference EffectsGame DesignMotor BehaviorHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceLearning SciencesRehabilitationExperimental PsychologyHigh-performance SportLearning TheoryContextual Interference Research
Abstract This study investigated the generalizability of results of contextual interference effects by extending previous laboratory research to a field setting. Thirty female subjects (N = 30) learned three badminton serves in either a blocked (low interference), serial (mixed interference), or random (high interference) practice schedule. The subjects practiced the serves three days a week for three weeks. On the day following the completion of practice the subjects were given a retention and transfer test. Results replicated previous findings of contextual interference research by showing a significant group by block interaction between acquisition trials, retention, and transfer. The random group performed better on both retention and transfer than the blocked group. The significant trial block by contextual interference interaction also supports the generalizability of contextual interference effects, as posited by Shea and Morgan (1979), to the teaching of motor skills.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1