There is evidence to suggest that sports experts are able to extract more perceptual information from a single fixation than novices when exposed to meaningful tasks that are specific to their field of expertise. In particular, Reingold et al. (2001) showed that chess experts use a larger visual span including fewer fixations when compared to their less skilled counterparts. The aim of the present study was to examine whether also in a more complex environment, namely soccer, skilled players use a larger visual span and fewer fixations than less skilled players when attempting to recognise players' positions. To this end, we combined the gaze-contingent window technique with the change detection paradigm. Results seem to suggest that skille...
Current knowledge of gaze behavior in football has primarily originated from eye-tracking research i...
In sports, studies on visual behavior have mostly focused on expert-novice differences during decisi...
Abernethy et al., 2 suggested that more skilled athletes produce quicker and more accurate responses...
This research examined the relationship between visual search strategy, selective attention, and exp...
Abstract—The reported research extends classic findings that after briefly viewing structured, but n...
Research has shown that identifiable visual search patterns characterize skilled performance of anti...
In sports, studies on visual behavior have mostly focused on expert-novice differences during decisi...
Chunking theory and previous eye-tracking studies suggest that expert chess players use peripheral v...
Chunking theory and previous eye-tracking studies suggest that expert chess players use peripheral v...
Recent perspectives for the study of perceptual-motor expertise have highlighted the importance for ...
This study investigated skill-based differences in anticipation and visual search strategy within op...
In this study we analyzed the pattern recall skills of talented soccer players by means of two innov...
We used a novel methodological approach to examine skill-based differences in anticipation and visua...
Exploration of eye-movement behaviors of humans can provide insight into the processes used to infor...
Current knowledge of gaze behavior in football has primarily originated from eye-tracking research i...
Current knowledge of gaze behavior in football has primarily originated from eye-tracking research i...
In sports, studies on visual behavior have mostly focused on expert-novice differences during decisi...
Abernethy et al., 2 suggested that more skilled athletes produce quicker and more accurate responses...
This research examined the relationship between visual search strategy, selective attention, and exp...
Abstract—The reported research extends classic findings that after briefly viewing structured, but n...
Research has shown that identifiable visual search patterns characterize skilled performance of anti...
In sports, studies on visual behavior have mostly focused on expert-novice differences during decisi...
Chunking theory and previous eye-tracking studies suggest that expert chess players use peripheral v...
Chunking theory and previous eye-tracking studies suggest that expert chess players use peripheral v...
Recent perspectives for the study of perceptual-motor expertise have highlighted the importance for ...
This study investigated skill-based differences in anticipation and visual search strategy within op...
In this study we analyzed the pattern recall skills of talented soccer players by means of two innov...
We used a novel methodological approach to examine skill-based differences in anticipation and visua...
Exploration of eye-movement behaviors of humans can provide insight into the processes used to infor...
Current knowledge of gaze behavior in football has primarily originated from eye-tracking research i...
Current knowledge of gaze behavior in football has primarily originated from eye-tracking research i...
In sports, studies on visual behavior have mostly focused on expert-novice differences during decisi...
Abernethy et al., 2 suggested that more skilled athletes produce quicker and more accurate responses...