Journal article

A deliberate practice account of typing proficiency in everyday typists


Authors listKeith, Nina; Ericsson, K. Anders

Publication year2007

Pages135-145

JournalJournal of Experimental Psychology: Applied

Volume number13

Issue number3

ISSN1076-898X

eISSN1939-2192

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1037/1076-898X.13.3.135

PublisherAmerican Psychological Association


Abstract
The concept of deliberate practice was introduced to explain exceptional performance in domains such as music and chess. We apply deliberate practice theory to intermediate-level performance in typing, an activity that many people pursue on a regular basis. Sixty university students with several years typing experience participated in laboratory sessions that involved the assessment of abilities, a semistructured interview on typing experience as well as various typing tasks. In line with traditional theories of skill acquisition, experience (amount of typing since introduction to the keyboard) was related to typing performance: A perceptual speed test (digit-symbol substitution) and a measure of motor abilities (tapping) were not significantly related to performance. In line with deliberate practice theory, the highest level of performance was reported among participants who had attended a typing class in the past and who reported to adopt the goal of typing quickly during everyday typing. Findings suggest that even after several years of experience engagement in an everyday activity can serve as an opportunity for further skill improvement if individuals are willing to push themselves.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleKeith, N. and Ericsson, K. (2007) A deliberate practice account of typing proficiency in everyday typists, Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 13(3), pp. 135-145. https://doi.org/10.1037/1076-898X.13.3.135

APA Citation styleKeith, N., & Ericsson, K. (2007). A deliberate practice account of typing proficiency in everyday typists. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied. 13(3), 135-145. https://doi.org/10.1037/1076-898X.13.3.135



Keywords


ABILITIESCURVEEXPERTgoalskeyboardingperformance improvementSELF-REGULATIONSKILLskill acquisition

Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 03:42