14 research outputs found
Implementing the Five-A Model of technical refinement: Key roles of the sport psychologist
There is increasing evidence for the significant contribution provided by sport psychologists within applied coaching environments. However, this rarely considers their skills/knowledge being applied when refining athletesâ already learned and well-established motor skills. Therefore, this paper focuses on how a sport psychologist might assist a coach and athlete to implement long-term permanent and pressure proof refinements. It highlights key contributions at each stage of the Five-A Modelâdesigned to deliver these important outcomesâproviding both psychomotor and psychosocial input to the support delivery. By employing these recommendations, sport psychologists can make multiple positive contributions to completion of this challenging task
False Start? : UK Sprint Coaches and Black/White Stereotypes
âThe final, definitive version of this article has been published in the Journal, Journal of Black Studies, 38 (2) pp.155-176, 2007 copyright SAGE Publications Ltd on SAGE Journals Online: http://online.sagepub.com/ " DOI: 10.1177/0021934705285178Peer reviewe
Optimization of performance in top-level athletes: an action-focused coping approach
In their target article, Yuri Hanin and Muza Hanina outlined a novel multidisciplinary approach to performance optimisation for sport psychologists called the Identification-Control-Correction (ICC) programme. According to the authors, this empirically-verified,
psycho-pedagogical strategy is designed to improve the quality of coaching and consistency of performance in highly skilled athletes and involves a number of steps including: (i)identifying and increasing self-awareness of âoptimalâ and ânon-optimalâ movement patterns
for individual athletes; (ii) learning to deliberately control the process of task execution; and (iii), correcting habitual and random errors and managing radical changes of movement patterns. Although no specific examples were provided, the ICC programme has apparently
been successful in enhancing the performance of Olympic-level athletes.
In this commentary, we address what we consider to be some important issues arising from the target article. We specifically focus attention on the contentious topic of
optimization in neurobiological movement systems, the role of constraints in shaping emergent movement patterns and the functional role of movement variability in producing
stable performance outcomes. In our view, the target article and, indeed, the proposed ICC programme, would benefit from a dynamical systems theoretical backdrop rather than the cognitive scientific approach that appears to be advocated. Although Hanin and Hanina made reference to, and attempted to integrate, constructs typically associated with dynamical systems theoretical accounts of motor control and learning (e.g., Bernsteinâs problem,
movement variability, etc.), these ideas required more detailed elaboration, which we provide in this commentar