An examination of the impact of introducing greater contextual interference during practice on learning to golf putt

The skill of putting in golf contributes approximately 40 percent to one’s total score making it an important skill to master in golf. One of the critical means of improving putting skill is through practice. The purpose of this study was to: (a) investigate if different practice schedules with di...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hwang, Gyu-Young
Other Authors: McBride, Ron
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1608
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-16082013-01-08T10:37:42ZAn examination of the impact of introducing greater contextual interference during practice on learning to golf puttHwang, Gyu-Younggolf puttingcontextual interferencecognitionkinematicsstimulated recallThe skill of putting in golf contributes approximately 40 percent to one’s total score making it an important skill to master in golf. One of the critical means of improving putting skill is through practice. The purpose of this study was to: (a) investigate if different practice schedules with different degrees of contextual interference (CI) influenced the participants’ immediate and long-term putting performance, (b) examine if performance changes were associated with concomitant changes in specific kinematic parameters, and (c) assess the cognitions of the participants during various stages of the practice of the putting skill. Twenty-four undergraduate students were randomly assigned to either a blocked or random practice schedule. On Day One each participant practiced putting to three targets (4 ft, 8 ft, and 12 ft distance) for a total of 108 trials (36 trials to each target). On Day Two 30 trials of retention (10 trials to each target) and 10 transfer trials (10 ft distance) were performed. To obtain a kinematic description of the putting action, an OPTOTRAKTM 3020 camera system recorded the 3D movement of the putter. Participants’ cognitions were analyzed from stimulated recall interview data. Random practice participants exhibited poorer putting performance during acquisition compared to their blocked practice counterparts but showed superior performance in retention and transfer tests. While the blocked practice participants had significantly lower variability in the amplitude in the x-dimension for backswing, impact velocity, and putter position at impact (z-dimension) during practice, the random practice participants showed significantly lower variability in the amplitude of the x-dimension for the backswing and downswing, impact velocity, and putter position at impact during the retention and transfer phases. Content analysis of interview data yielded three emergent categories: participant focus, self-evaluation of performance, and benefits of practice. The participants provided evidence of active thought processes during the putting task while receiving little instruction. The blocked group focused more on accuracy while the random group was more focused on judging distance. The lack of recognition about the z-dimension has potential implications for how instruction and feedback might be employed during the learning process.Texas A&M UniversityMcBride, Ron2005-02-17T21:07:26Z2005-02-17T21:07:26Z2003-122005-02-17T21:07:26ZBookThesisElectronic Record of Studytext553373 byteselectronicapplication/pdfborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1608en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic golf putting
contextual interference
cognition
kinematics
stimulated recall
spellingShingle golf putting
contextual interference
cognition
kinematics
stimulated recall
Hwang, Gyu-Young
An examination of the impact of introducing greater contextual interference during practice on learning to golf putt
description The skill of putting in golf contributes approximately 40 percent to one’s total score making it an important skill to master in golf. One of the critical means of improving putting skill is through practice. The purpose of this study was to: (a) investigate if different practice schedules with different degrees of contextual interference (CI) influenced the participants’ immediate and long-term putting performance, (b) examine if performance changes were associated with concomitant changes in specific kinematic parameters, and (c) assess the cognitions of the participants during various stages of the practice of the putting skill. Twenty-four undergraduate students were randomly assigned to either a blocked or random practice schedule. On Day One each participant practiced putting to three targets (4 ft, 8 ft, and 12 ft distance) for a total of 108 trials (36 trials to each target). On Day Two 30 trials of retention (10 trials to each target) and 10 transfer trials (10 ft distance) were performed. To obtain a kinematic description of the putting action, an OPTOTRAKTM 3020 camera system recorded the 3D movement of the putter. Participants’ cognitions were analyzed from stimulated recall interview data. Random practice participants exhibited poorer putting performance during acquisition compared to their blocked practice counterparts but showed superior performance in retention and transfer tests. While the blocked practice participants had significantly lower variability in the amplitude in the x-dimension for backswing, impact velocity, and putter position at impact (z-dimension) during practice, the random practice participants showed significantly lower variability in the amplitude of the x-dimension for the backswing and downswing, impact velocity, and putter position at impact during the retention and transfer phases. Content analysis of interview data yielded three emergent categories: participant focus, self-evaluation of performance, and benefits of practice. The participants provided evidence of active thought processes during the putting task while receiving little instruction. The blocked group focused more on accuracy while the random group was more focused on judging distance. The lack of recognition about the z-dimension has potential implications for how instruction and feedback might be employed during the learning process.
author2 McBride, Ron
author_facet McBride, Ron
Hwang, Gyu-Young
author Hwang, Gyu-Young
author_sort Hwang, Gyu-Young
title An examination of the impact of introducing greater contextual interference during practice on learning to golf putt
title_short An examination of the impact of introducing greater contextual interference during practice on learning to golf putt
title_full An examination of the impact of introducing greater contextual interference during practice on learning to golf putt
title_fullStr An examination of the impact of introducing greater contextual interference during practice on learning to golf putt
title_full_unstemmed An examination of the impact of introducing greater contextual interference during practice on learning to golf putt
title_sort examination of the impact of introducing greater contextual interference during practice on learning to golf putt
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1608
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