EXPERT AND EXCEPTIONAL PERFORMANCE: Evidence of Maximal Adaptation to Task Constraints
- 1 February 1996
- journal article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Psychology
- Vol. 47 (1) , 273-305
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.psych.47.1.273
Abstract
▪ Abstract Expert and exceptional performance are shown to be mediated by cognitive and perceptual-motor skills and by domain-specific physiological and anatomical adaptations. The highest levels of human performance in different domains can only be attained after around ten years of extended, daily amounts of deliberate practice activities. Laboratory analyses of expert performance in many domains such as chess, medicine, auditing, computer programming, bridge, physics, sports, typing, juggling, dance, and music reveal maximal adaptations of experts to domain-specific constraints. For example, acquired anticipatory skills circumvent general limits on reaction time, and distinctive memory skills allow a domain-specific expansion of working memory capacity to support planning, reasoning, and evaluation. Many of the mechanisms of superior expert performance serve the dual purpose of mediating experts' current performance and of allowing continued improvement of this performance in response to informative feedback during practice activities.Keywords
This publication has 155 references indexed in Scilit:
- Competence in experts: The role of task characteristicsPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- Discussion: Of human skillsOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 1992
- Why study expert decision making? Some historical perspectives and commentsOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 1992
- Success and failure in expert reasoningOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 1992
- Expertise and hierarchical knowledge representation in chessPsychological Research, 1992
- Error in chess: The apperception-restructuring viewPsychological Research, 1992
- Effects of framing on auditor decisionsOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 1991
- Bone dynamics: Stress, strain and fractureJournal of Sports Sciences, 1987
- Components of skill in bridge.Canadian Journal of Psychology / Revue canadienne de psychologie, 1979
- Voluntary motor ability of the world's champion typists.Journal of Applied Psychology, 1924