Tennis
Federer and Nadal Can See the Difference
From: Federer and Nadal Can See the Difference
Sports Are 80 Percent Mental

Watching
Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal battle it out in the French Open final
last month, and now the epic Wimbledon final, I started thinking more about the interceptive timing
task requirements of each of their visuomotor systems... yeah, right.
C'mon, I just needed a good opening line for this post.
However,
other than a 120 mph tennis serve, take
a second to think about all of the different sports that send an object
flying at you at very high speeds that you not only have to see, but
also estimate the speed of the object, the movement of the object and
what you want to do with the object once it gets to you.
Some examples are:
- a hockey puck at a goalie (70-100 mph)
- a baseball pitch at a batter (70-100 mph)
- a soccer ball kicked at a keeper (60-90 mph)
Previously, we took a look at this in baseball and in soccer and also discussed the different types of visual skills in sports. There, we broke it down into three categories:
- Targeting tasks
- Interceptive timing tasks
- Tactical decision making tasks
The
second category, interceptive timing tasks, deals with the examples
above; stuff coming at you fast and you need to react. There are three
levels of response that take an increasing level of brainpower. First,
there is a basic reaction, also known as optometric reaction. In other
words, "see it and get out of the way". Next, there is a perceptual
reaction, meaning you actually can identify the object coming at you
and can put it in some context (i.e. that is a tennis ball coming at
you and not a bird swooping out of the sky). Finally, there is a
cognitive reaction, meaning you know what is coming at you and you have
a plan of what to do with it (i.e. return the ball with top-spin
down the right line). This cognitive skill is usually sport-specific
and learned over years of tactical training. Obviously, for
professional tennis players, they are at the expert cognitive stage and
have a plan for most shots. Federer's problem was that Nadal had better
plans. But, in order to reach that cognitive stage, they first need to
have excellent optometric and perceptual skills. Can those skills be
trained? Or are the best tennis players born with naturally better
abilities? Did their training make them better tennis players or are
they better players because of some natural skills?
Leila Overney and her team at the Brain Mind Institute of Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL)
recently studied whether expert tennis players have better visual
perception abilities than other athletes and non-tennis players.
Typically, motor skill research compares experts to non-experts and
tries to deduce what the experts are doing differently to excel. In
this study, an additional category was added. Overney wanted to see if
the perceptual skills of the tennis players were significantly more
advanced than athletes of a similar fitness level, (in this case
triathletes), to eliminate the variable of "fitness", and also more
advanced than novice tennis players (the typical comparison). To
eliminate the cognitive knowledge difference between the groups, she
used seven non-sport specific visual tests. Please see the actual study
for details of all the tests. The bottom line of the results was that
certain motion detection and speed discrimination skills were better in
the tennis players (in other words, being able to track a ball coming
at you and its movement side to side).
So, the expert tennis
players were better at tracking balls coming at them than triathletes
and non-tennis players.... seems pretty obvious(!) But, these results
are a first step to answering the question of "can these skills be
trained"? We see that there is, indeed, a difference in ability level
between expert players and athletes that are in similar shape and
competitive spirit. Now, the question becomes, "how did these tennis
players acquire a higher level of perception skill"? Was it "nature or
nurture", "genetically gifted or trained through practice"?
What do you think?
Source: Overney,
L.S., Blanke, O., Herzog, M.H., Burr, D.C. (2008). Enhanced Temporal
but Not Attentional Processing in Expert Tennis Players. PLoS ONE, 3(6), e2380. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0002380
