Metacognition and action: A new pathway to understanding social and cognitive aspects of expertise in sport

For over a century, psychologists have investigated the mental processes of expert performers - people who display exceptional knowledge and/or skills in specific fields of human achievement. Since the 1960s, expertise researchers have made considerable progress in understanding the cognitive and ne...

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Main Authors: Tadhg Eoghan Macintyre, Eric R Igou, Mark J Campbell, Aidan P Moran, James eMatthews
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01155/full
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spelling doaj-12bdafc160e747068a42541d45828af62020-11-25T00:49:21ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782014-10-01510.3389/fpsyg.2014.01155104527Metacognition and action: A new pathway to understanding social and cognitive aspects of expertise in sportTadhg Eoghan Macintyre0Eric R Igou1Mark J Campbell2Aidan P Moran3James eMatthews4University of LimerickUniversity of LimerickUniversity of LimerickUniversity College DublinUniversity College DublinFor over a century, psychologists have investigated the mental processes of expert performers - people who display exceptional knowledge and/or skills in specific fields of human achievement. Since the 1960s, expertise researchers have made considerable progress in understanding the cognitive and neural mechanisms that underlie such exceptional performance. Whereas the first modern studies of expertise were conducted in relatively formal knowledge domains such as chess, more recent investigations have explored elite performance in dynamic perceptual-motor activities such as sport. Unfortunately, although these studies have led to the identification of certain domain-free generalizations about expert-novice differences, they shed little light on an important issue: namely, experts’ metacognitive activities or their insights into, and regulation of, their own mental processes. In an effort to rectify this oversight, the present paper argues that metacognitive processes and inferences play an important if neglected role in expertise. In particular, we suggest that metacognition (including such processes as ‘meta-attention’, ‘meta-imagery’ and ‘meta-memory’, as well as social aspects of this construct) provides a window on the genesis of expert performance. Following a critique of the standard empirical approach to expertise, we explore some research on ‘metacognition’ and ‘metacognitive inference’ among experts in sport. After that, we provide a brief evaluation of the relationship between psychological skills training and metacognition and comment on the measurement of metacognitive processes. Finally, we summarize our conclusions and outline some potentially new directions for research on metacognition in action.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01155/fullCognitionExpertiseCognitive neuroscienceSportMotor cognitionsport psychology.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tadhg Eoghan Macintyre
Eric R Igou
Mark J Campbell
Aidan P Moran
James eMatthews
spellingShingle Tadhg Eoghan Macintyre
Eric R Igou
Mark J Campbell
Aidan P Moran
James eMatthews
Metacognition and action: A new pathway to understanding social and cognitive aspects of expertise in sport
Frontiers in Psychology
Cognition
Expertise
Cognitive neuroscience
Sport
Motor cognition
sport psychology.
author_facet Tadhg Eoghan Macintyre
Eric R Igou
Mark J Campbell
Aidan P Moran
James eMatthews
author_sort Tadhg Eoghan Macintyre
title Metacognition and action: A new pathway to understanding social and cognitive aspects of expertise in sport
title_short Metacognition and action: A new pathway to understanding social and cognitive aspects of expertise in sport
title_full Metacognition and action: A new pathway to understanding social and cognitive aspects of expertise in sport
title_fullStr Metacognition and action: A new pathway to understanding social and cognitive aspects of expertise in sport
title_full_unstemmed Metacognition and action: A new pathway to understanding social and cognitive aspects of expertise in sport
title_sort metacognition and action: a new pathway to understanding social and cognitive aspects of expertise in sport
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2014-10-01
description For over a century, psychologists have investigated the mental processes of expert performers - people who display exceptional knowledge and/or skills in specific fields of human achievement. Since the 1960s, expertise researchers have made considerable progress in understanding the cognitive and neural mechanisms that underlie such exceptional performance. Whereas the first modern studies of expertise were conducted in relatively formal knowledge domains such as chess, more recent investigations have explored elite performance in dynamic perceptual-motor activities such as sport. Unfortunately, although these studies have led to the identification of certain domain-free generalizations about expert-novice differences, they shed little light on an important issue: namely, experts’ metacognitive activities or their insights into, and regulation of, their own mental processes. In an effort to rectify this oversight, the present paper argues that metacognitive processes and inferences play an important if neglected role in expertise. In particular, we suggest that metacognition (including such processes as ‘meta-attention’, ‘meta-imagery’ and ‘meta-memory’, as well as social aspects of this construct) provides a window on the genesis of expert performance. Following a critique of the standard empirical approach to expertise, we explore some research on ‘metacognition’ and ‘metacognitive inference’ among experts in sport. After that, we provide a brief evaluation of the relationship between psychological skills training and metacognition and comment on the measurement of metacognitive processes. Finally, we summarize our conclusions and outline some potentially new directions for research on metacognition in action.
topic Cognition
Expertise
Cognitive neuroscience
Sport
Motor cognition
sport psychology.
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01155/full
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