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Use of Self Organizing Maps in Technique Analysis

Authors :
Bartlett, Roger
Lamb, Peter
Robbins, Anthony
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum f��r Informatik, 2008.

Abstract

This study looked at the coordination patterns of four participants performing three different basketball shots from different distances. The shots selected were the three-point shot, the free throw shot and the hook shot; the latter was included to encourage a phase transition between shots. We hypothesised lower variability between the three-point and free throw shots compared to the hook shot. The study uses Self-Organizing Maps (SOM) to expose the non-linearity of the movement and to try to explain more specifically what it is about the coordination patterns that make them different or similar. The SOM proved to draw the researcher's attention to aspects of the movement that were not obvious from a visual analysis of the original movement either viewed from video or as computer animation. A speculative link between the observational learning literature on the importance of the kinematics of distal segments in skill acquisition and the visual information a coach or analyst may rely on for qualitative technique analysis was made. Although making the distinction between the three shooting conditions was meant to be a trivial exercise, in many cases for this dataset the SOM output and the natural inclination of the movement analyst did not agree: the SOM may provide a more objective method for explaining movement patterning.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........87b0083c2467b9a799c2ab08a173bc72
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4230/dagsemproc.08372.8