Athletes must be able to make split-second decisions under the
pressures of competition, but often this vital learning is left
to chance. With Perception, , and Decision Training: The
Quiet Eye in Action, readers gain access to the research
foundations behind an innovative decision-training system that
has been used successfully for years in training athletes.
Certain to become the definitive guide to decision making in
sport, this text presents three innovations solidly based in
research. The first is the vision-in-action method of
what athletes actually see when they perform. The second is the
quiet eye phenomenon that has attracted considerable media
attention. The third innovation is decision training to identify
not only how athletes make performance decisions but also how to
facilitate visual perception and action to enhance performance.
Author Joan Vickers—who discovered the quiet eye and developed
the vision-in-action method—takes the next step by integrating
all three innovations into a system for helping athletes improve.
Together, these advances provide scientific evidence of the
effectiveness of perception–action coupling in athletes'
training.
Perception, , and Decision Training: The Quiet Eye in
Action is applied to a variety of sports and settings through a
three-step decision-training model and seven ready-to-use tools
for encouraging athletes to become part of the decision-training
process. These tools are research-based concepts that coaches can
choose from in order to help train athletes on a specific
decision-making task in a simulated competition context. The book
also uses these features:
-Informative chapter-opening items provide an overview of the
content, and special sections recap the previous chapter and
introduce the next.
-Screen captures from the latest in eye-tracking technology show
what athletes actually see, where their eyes are directed, and
how their gaze differs depending on their ability level.
-Boldfaced key terms and a thorough glossary make it easy to
identify key concepts in this emerging field of study.
-Chapter-closing in-action sections provide an rtunity to
visit Web sites, read articles, or complete tasks to discover how
the concepts learned can be applied.
-Case studies show how coaches and athletes in various sports
have successfully used gaze control and decision training.
The book is organized into three parts. Part I introduces the
visuomotor system and two processing systems that work together
to permit the great range of actions humans perform. Eye-tracking
technology is reviewed along with new possibilities for measuring
what athletes really see when they perform. In part II, the
author presents a unique framework of gaze control. Readers will
learn how skilled athletes control the gaze to gain optimal
control of their attention and decision making. The quiet eye
phenomenon, measurement, and training are also addressed.
Part III describes the three-step decision-training model and its
application to how coaches design practice, provide feedback, use
questions, and give instructions. Case studies show how others
are using the model and the seven decision-training tools.
Decision training is designed to improve athletes' attention,
anticipation, concentration, memory, and problem-solving skills,
leading to extraordinary long-term gains. The cutting-edge
research presented in this book allows readers to appreciate the
growing importance of , vision, and decision making; it
also shows them how to apply this knowledge to sport training and
coaching.
- Human Kinetics Publishers.