Is the relationship between pattern recall and decision-making influenced by anticipatory recall? The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17470218.2013.777083
When the above article was first published online it contained errors in the text. Details of the corrections are listed below. These have now been corrected in both the print and online versions.
In the below sentences, the citation Gorman et al. (2012) was omitted:
Comparisons could then be conducted to determine whether anticipatory recall was indeed a better predictor of decision-making than traditional methods of recall measurement (Gorman et al., 2012).
However, while previous research (e.g., Farrow et al., 2010; Starkes et al., 1994; Williams & Davids, 1995) has suggested that pattern recall skill (perception) may be linked to other response outcomes such as decision-making (action), no studies have considered the potential influence of the inherently anticipatory nature of expert pattern perception on decision-making (Gorman et al., 2012).
Hence, anticipatory recall, as opposed to traditional recall performance, should be more closely linked with decision-making than the traditional measure of recall where anticipation is ignored (Gorman et al., 2012).
Traditional and anticipatory recall measures were analysed separately to determine whether anticipatory recall of the patterns was more closely linked with decision-making than traditional measures of recall where anticipation is typically ignored (Gorman et al., 2012).
By comparing traditional measures of pattern recall with measures of anticipatory recall and decision-making, the present study was designed to further examine the mechanisms underlying the anticipatory nature of expert pattern perception and address the methodological limitations of previous studies where anticipatory recall has been largely ignored (Gorman et al., 2012).
It was hypothesised that anticipatory recall performance would be more closely linked to decision-making accuracy than traditional measures of recall where anticipation is generally ignored (Gorman et al., 2012).
These conclusions require corroboration through further research but there is nevertheless a distinct need to direct greater effort towards identifying the relative anticipatory contribution of specific pattern structures within a dynamic team-sport environment (Gorman et al., 2012).
In the following sentence, the citation Freyd (1983) was omitted:
The novices' first-hand perceptual–motor experience of simple human movements may have allowed them to infer the subsequent locations of players moving about in a more specific environment (see also Freyd, 1983; Gorman et al., 2012).
The below sentence omitted ‘on potential’:
The memory structures are proposed to contain links and pointers that supply information on potential strategies and tactical manoeuvres thereby providing an explanation for the anticipatory recall exhibited by experts in pattern perception tasks (Gobet, 1998; Gobet & Simon, 1996, 1998).
Taylor & Francis apologises for these errors.