4.4 Article

Processing visual information in elite junior soccer players: Effects of chronological age and training experience on visual perception, attention, and decision making

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SPORT SCIENCE
Volume 22, Issue 4, Pages 600-609

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/17461391.2021.1887366

Keywords

Feature recognition; object-detection; selection; team sport; youth athletes

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The study investigated the effects of age and training experience on perception, attention, and decision-making in young soccer players. It found that performance decreased in decision-making and feature-recognition tasks with increasing use of peripheral visual field, but not in the object-detection task. Players under 18 years old showed superior attentional skills compared to those under 16 years old, and higher training experience affected decision-making and attentional performance.
Processing information in peripheral vision is an important perceptual-cognitive skill in team sports. The relative contribution of various perceptual-cognitive skills to expertise in sports throughout adolescence has not been investigated in detail yet. The current study examined the effects of chronological age and training experience on perception, attention, and decision making in young soccer players. Sixty-five elite youth players were required to judge different game situations in a decision-making task involving both perceptual (object detection) and attentional (postural feature recognition) skills to perceive player configurations in the visual periphery. In general, performance decreased in the decision-making and feature-recognition tasks with increasing use of peripheral visual field, but not in the object-detection task. Superior performances were found for under 18-years-old players compared to under 16-years-old players especially in their attentional skills. Higher training experience affected decision-making and attentional performance. Overall, the findings provide insights and implications for training perceptual-cognitive skills in team sports

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