In this updated and expanded edition of The Cambridge Handbook of Expertise and Expert Performance, some of the world's foremost experts on expertise share their scientific knowledge of expertise and expert performance and show how experts may differ from non-experts in terms of development, training, reasoning, knowledge, and social support. The book reviews innovative methods for measuring experts' knowledge and performance in relevant tasks. Sixteen major domains of expertise are covered, including sports, music, medicine, business, writing, and drawing, with leading researchers summarizing…mehr
In this updated and expanded edition of The Cambridge Handbook of Expertise and Expert Performance, some of the world's foremost experts on expertise share their scientific knowledge of expertise and expert performance and show how experts may differ from non-experts in terms of development, training, reasoning, knowledge, and social support. The book reviews innovative methods for measuring experts' knowledge and performance in relevant tasks. Sixteen major domains of expertise are covered, including sports, music, medicine, business, writing, and drawing, with leading researchers summarizing their knowledge about the structure and acquisition of expert skills and knowledge, and discussing future prospects. General issues that cut across most domains are reviewed in chapters on various aspects of expertise, such as general and practical intelligence, differences in brain activity, self-regulated learning, deliberate practice, aging, knowledge management, and creativity.
Part I. Introduction and Perspectives: 1. An introduction to the 2nd Edition of the Cambridge Handbook of Expertise and Expert Performance: its development, organization, and content 2. A sociological/philosophical perspective on expertise: the acquisition of expertise through socialization 3. Re-framing expertise and its development: a lifeworld perspective 4. The evolution of expertise 5. Expertise in other non-human animals: canines as an example Part II. Overview of Approaches to the Study of Expertise: Brief Historical Accounts of Theories and Methods 6. Studies of expertise from psychological perspectives: historical foundations and recurrent themes 7. Expert systems: a perspective from computer science 8. Developing occupational expertise through everyday work activities and interactions 9. Professionalism, science, and expert roles: a social perspective Part III. Methods for Studying the Structure of Expertise: 10. Perception in expertise 11. Eliciting and representing the knowledge of experts 12. Capturing expert thought with protocol analysis: concurrent verbalizations of thinking during experts' performance on representative tasks 13. Methods for studying the structure of expertise: psychometric approaches 14. Studies of the activation and structural changes of the brain associated with expertise Part IV. Methods for Studying the Acquisition and Maintenance of Expertise: 15. Collecting and assessing practice activity data: concurrent, retrospective and longitudinal approaches 16. Multidisciplinary longitudinal studies: a perspective from the field of sports 17. Using cases to understand expert performance: method and methodological triangulation 18. Historiometric methods Part V. Domains of Expertise Section 1. Professional Domains: 19. Expertise in medicine and surgery 20. Expertise and transportation 21. Expertise in professional design 22. Toward deliberate practice in the development of entrepreneurial expertise: the anatomy of the effectual ask 23. Professional writing expertise 24. Expertise and expert performance in teaching 25. Expert professional judgments and 'naturalistic decision making' 26. Decision making skill: from intelligence to numeracy and expertise 27. What makes an expert team? A decade of research Section 2. Arts, Sports, Games and Other Types of Expertise: 28. Expertise in music 29. Brain changes associated with acquisition of musical expertise 30. Expertise in drawing 31. Expertise in chess 32. Mathematical expertise 33. Expertise in L2 vocabulary 34. Expertise in sport: specificity, plasticity and adaptability in high-performance athletes Part VI. Generalizable Mechanisms Mediating Types of Expertise 35. Superior anticipation 36. Superior working memory in experts 37. Expertise and situation awareness Part VII. General Issues and Theoretical Frameworks 38. The differential influence of experience, practice, and deliberate practice on the development of superior individual performance of experts 39. Practical intelligence and tacit knowledge: an ecological view of expertise 40. Cognitive load and expertise reversal 41. Expertise and structured imagination in creative thinking: reconsideration of an old question 42. Aging and expertise.
Part I. Introduction and Perspectives: 1. An introduction to the 2nd Edition of the Cambridge Handbook of Expertise and Expert Performance: its development, organization, and content 2. A sociological/philosophical perspective on expertise: the acquisition of expertise through socialization 3. Re-framing expertise and its development: a lifeworld perspective 4. The evolution of expertise 5. Expertise in other non-human animals: canines as an example Part II. Overview of Approaches to the Study of Expertise: Brief Historical Accounts of Theories and Methods 6. Studies of expertise from psychological perspectives: historical foundations and recurrent themes 7. Expert systems: a perspective from computer science 8. Developing occupational expertise through everyday work activities and interactions 9. Professionalism, science, and expert roles: a social perspective Part III. Methods for Studying the Structure of Expertise: 10. Perception in expertise 11. Eliciting and representing the knowledge of experts 12. Capturing expert thought with protocol analysis: concurrent verbalizations of thinking during experts' performance on representative tasks 13. Methods for studying the structure of expertise: psychometric approaches 14. Studies of the activation and structural changes of the brain associated with expertise Part IV. Methods for Studying the Acquisition and Maintenance of Expertise: 15. Collecting and assessing practice activity data: concurrent, retrospective and longitudinal approaches 16. Multidisciplinary longitudinal studies: a perspective from the field of sports 17. Using cases to understand expert performance: method and methodological triangulation 18. Historiometric methods Part V. Domains of Expertise Section 1. Professional Domains: 19. Expertise in medicine and surgery 20. Expertise and transportation 21. Expertise in professional design 22. Toward deliberate practice in the development of entrepreneurial expertise: the anatomy of the effectual ask 23. Professional writing expertise 24. Expertise and expert performance in teaching 25. Expert professional judgments and 'naturalistic decision making' 26. Decision making skill: from intelligence to numeracy and expertise 27. What makes an expert team? A decade of research Section 2. Arts, Sports, Games and Other Types of Expertise: 28. Expertise in music 29. Brain changes associated with acquisition of musical expertise 30. Expertise in drawing 31. Expertise in chess 32. Mathematical expertise 33. Expertise in L2 vocabulary 34. Expertise in sport: specificity, plasticity and adaptability in high-performance athletes Part VI. Generalizable Mechanisms Mediating Types of Expertise 35. Superior anticipation 36. Superior working memory in experts 37. Expertise and situation awareness Part VII. General Issues and Theoretical Frameworks 38. The differential influence of experience, practice, and deliberate practice on the development of superior individual performance of experts 39. Practical intelligence and tacit knowledge: an ecological view of expertise 40. Cognitive load and expertise reversal 41. Expertise and structured imagination in creative thinking: reconsideration of an old question 42. Aging and expertise.
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