A new book edited by a 91亚色 professor examines the factors that may help predict pro-sport prowess.
The book, Talent Identification and Development in Sport, (Routledge, 2011) offers an overview of current scientific research along with practical information for parents and coaches looking to spot talent and nurture it.
鈥淲e鈥檙e hoping this book helps inform a better system for spotting talent early on and making the most of it,鈥 says Joseph Baker (left), professor in 91亚色鈥檚 School of Kinesiology & Health Science, Faculty of Health. 鈥淲e鈥檝e tried to answer questions that have thus far been elusive, such as, 鈥榟ow do elite athletes develop, and when is the most appropriate time for talent identification and development interventions?鈥,鈥 he says.
The book features an interdisciplinary group of contributors from sport psychology, motor learning and skill acquisition, exercise physiology and coaching. Leading researchers from the field of athlete development explain their research and how it informs our understanding of the process of sport skill acquisition. Topics include genetics and secondary factors such as birth date, cultural context and population size, perceptual motor skill acquisition and sports development policy.
Baker, who contributed a chapter on genetics, explains that performance-related genes are by no means a magic bullet for identifying natural ability.
鈥淭here are now companies that scan for performance-related genes in newborn babies. Theoretically such criteria should be able to predict an individual鈥檚 potential to become an elite athlete 鈥 or anything for that matter. The problem is that scientists aren鈥檛 sure exactly what criteria they鈥檙e looking for quite yet,鈥 he says.
鈥淎longside biological realities, we must look at factors like where and when an individual grew up, cultural norms, and the sport programs and polices in place at that time. T
hese variables can all have an enormous impact,鈥 says Baker.
The volume鈥檚 latter half offers case studies examining international success stories from the 鈥渢renches鈥 of talent identification and development, from individual sports like track & field and gymnastics, to team sports including soccer and rugby.
鈥淎thletic prowess is commonly thought of as a combination of nurture and nature, but the interplay of these factors is quite complex,鈥 says Baker. 鈥淥ur aim was to give a state-of-the-science overview that would be accessible for parents, coaches, athletes and anyone interested in talent development.鈥
The book is co-edited by Steve Cobley, senior lecturer in skill acquisition and sport psychology within the Carnegie Faculty at Leeds Metropolitan University, UK, and J枚rg Schorer, research associate at the Institute of Sport Science at the Westf盲lische Wilhelms-University M眉nster, Germany. Baker is part of 91亚色鈥檚 Lifespan Health聽& Performance Laboratory and is a visiting research fellow at Leeds Metropolitan University, UK.
Republished courtesy of YFile 鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin.
