The impact of anxiety and challenge on quiet eye in tenpin bowling

Expert performers tend to have an advantage over others due to competent visual search ability, and this is particularly evident in self-paced sports where athletes have ample amount of time to go through the visual search process before taking a shot. A critical part of the visual search process is...

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Main Author: Lim, Bernice Hui Ying
Other Authors: Chow Jia Yi
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2014
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/59020
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-590202020-09-27T20:26:30Z The impact of anxiety and challenge on quiet eye in tenpin bowling Lim, Bernice Hui Ying Chow Jia Yi National Institute of Education Singapore Sports Institute DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology Expert performers tend to have an advantage over others due to competent visual search ability, and this is particularly evident in self-paced sports where athletes have ample amount of time to go through the visual search process before taking a shot. A critical part of the visual search process is the Quiet Eye (QE), defined as the last fixation at a target prior to initiation of movement (Vickers, 2007). The purpose of this study was to investigate visual search and QE strategies during pre-movement phase between elite and sub-elite players in tenpin bowling. It was hypothesized from past research that elite would demonstrate longer visual search duration compared to the sub-elite. This study also included anxiety-inducing and perceived difficulty conditions where changes in visual search patterns and performance outcomes were predicted. Two groups of participants comprising of elite (n=11) and sub-elite (n=10) players were tested under four counterbalanced conditions: low anxiety low challenge (LALC), high anxiety low challenge (HALC), low anxiety high challenge (LAHC), and high anxiety high challenge (HAHC). The anxiety inducing condition required players to achieve a target score, while bowling on non-preferred oiling pattern was the high challenge condition. Participants threw 10 shots for each condition and wore the Dikablis Gaze Tracking System that recorded eye movement throughout the trial. Unlike past literature, elite bowlers displayed shorter visual search duration and lesser fixations compared to the sub-elite. Shorter QE duration was found for successful compared to unsuccessful shots in elite bowlers, but the opposite for sub-elite. Bachelor of Science (Sport Science and Management) 2014-04-21T05:27:43Z 2014-04-21T05:27:43Z 2014 2014 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/59020 en 51 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
Lim, Bernice Hui Ying
The impact of anxiety and challenge on quiet eye in tenpin bowling
description Expert performers tend to have an advantage over others due to competent visual search ability, and this is particularly evident in self-paced sports where athletes have ample amount of time to go through the visual search process before taking a shot. A critical part of the visual search process is the Quiet Eye (QE), defined as the last fixation at a target prior to initiation of movement (Vickers, 2007). The purpose of this study was to investigate visual search and QE strategies during pre-movement phase between elite and sub-elite players in tenpin bowling. It was hypothesized from past research that elite would demonstrate longer visual search duration compared to the sub-elite. This study also included anxiety-inducing and perceived difficulty conditions where changes in visual search patterns and performance outcomes were predicted. Two groups of participants comprising of elite (n=11) and sub-elite (n=10) players were tested under four counterbalanced conditions: low anxiety low challenge (LALC), high anxiety low challenge (HALC), low anxiety high challenge (LAHC), and high anxiety high challenge (HAHC). The anxiety inducing condition required players to achieve a target score, while bowling on non-preferred oiling pattern was the high challenge condition. Participants threw 10 shots for each condition and wore the Dikablis Gaze Tracking System that recorded eye movement throughout the trial. Unlike past literature, elite bowlers displayed shorter visual search duration and lesser fixations compared to the sub-elite. Shorter QE duration was found for successful compared to unsuccessful shots in elite bowlers, but the opposite for sub-elite.
author2 Chow Jia Yi
author_facet Chow Jia Yi
Lim, Bernice Hui Ying
format Final Year Project
author Lim, Bernice Hui Ying
author_sort Lim, Bernice Hui Ying
title The impact of anxiety and challenge on quiet eye in tenpin bowling
title_short The impact of anxiety and challenge on quiet eye in tenpin bowling
title_full The impact of anxiety and challenge on quiet eye in tenpin bowling
title_fullStr The impact of anxiety and challenge on quiet eye in tenpin bowling
title_full_unstemmed The impact of anxiety and challenge on quiet eye in tenpin bowling
title_sort impact of anxiety and challenge on quiet eye in tenpin bowling
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/59020
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