From a scientific perspective, talent inclusion for the purposes of development is the most promising path for the use of genetic testing, requiring an enhanced scientific literacy of sports organisation decision-makers, making them less vulnerable to the FOMO effect. The mainstream inflated importance of genetic testing exemplifies an organismic asymmetry. Instead, performance and potentiality should be understood at the ecological level, the organism-environment system level of analysis. Commitment to understanding human behaviour at this ecological scale signifies that performance and potential are not properties located within the athlete (e.g., genes, mental representations), nor within the environment. Rather, it implies the coupling ...
Over the last 20 years, the concept of innate talent has been discussed in the literature, and diffe...
The historical debate on the relative influences of genes (i.e. nature) and environment (i.e. nurtur...
Despite extensive research, questions underlying the nature and nurture of talent remain both numero...
Of fundamental, theoretical and practical, relevance to sport science is the conceptualisation of ta...
In this short commentary, I provide considerations for whether genetic testing is a worthwhile inves...
An the recent article by Baker and Wattie (2018), they provided an update on the widely cited review...
The phenomenon of human diversity which has been empirically observed and verified, has long attract...
A recent comment in the Journal of Sports Sciences (MacNamara & Collins, 2011) highlighted some ...
Explaining exceptional human performance remains problematic. Baker & Wattie (2018) explored the...
The use of genetic testing within sport is a hotly debated topic, with concerns around utility, vali...
Abstract While the influence of nature (genes) and nurture (environment) on elite sporting performan...
The purpose of talent identification (TI) is the earliest possible selection of auspicious athletes ...
The theory of Ecological Dynamics proposes that talented performance in sport emerges when an indivi...
A definition of talent: There is a view that talent is something you are born with and it is in your...
An the recent article by Baker and Wattie (2018), they provided an update on the widely cited review...
Over the last 20 years, the concept of innate talent has been discussed in the literature, and diffe...
The historical debate on the relative influences of genes (i.e. nature) and environment (i.e. nurtur...
Despite extensive research, questions underlying the nature and nurture of talent remain both numero...
Of fundamental, theoretical and practical, relevance to sport science is the conceptualisation of ta...
In this short commentary, I provide considerations for whether genetic testing is a worthwhile inves...
An the recent article by Baker and Wattie (2018), they provided an update on the widely cited review...
The phenomenon of human diversity which has been empirically observed and verified, has long attract...
A recent comment in the Journal of Sports Sciences (MacNamara & Collins, 2011) highlighted some ...
Explaining exceptional human performance remains problematic. Baker & Wattie (2018) explored the...
The use of genetic testing within sport is a hotly debated topic, with concerns around utility, vali...
Abstract While the influence of nature (genes) and nurture (environment) on elite sporting performan...
The purpose of talent identification (TI) is the earliest possible selection of auspicious athletes ...
The theory of Ecological Dynamics proposes that talented performance in sport emerges when an indivi...
A definition of talent: There is a view that talent is something you are born with and it is in your...
An the recent article by Baker and Wattie (2018), they provided an update on the widely cited review...
Over the last 20 years, the concept of innate talent has been discussed in the literature, and diffe...
The historical debate on the relative influences of genes (i.e. nature) and environment (i.e. nurtur...
Despite extensive research, questions underlying the nature and nurture of talent remain both numero...