High-achieving adults rarely began as child prodigies

A review of studies shows that most top performers in fields like chess, Olympics, and science did not excel as children. Instead, they often developed their skills gradually through diverse activities. This challenges the idea that early intensive training guarantees long-term success.

International chess masters, Olympic gold medallists, and Nobel prize-winning scientists were rarely child prodigies, according to an analysis of 19 studies involving nearly 35,000 high-performing individuals. The research, led by Arne Güllich at RPTU Kaiserslautern in Germany, reveals that the vast majority of adults leading worldwide rankings in their expertise grew up engaging in a broad range of activities before gradually honing their primary skill.

Güllich notes that this finding contradicts popular beliefs about the need for intensive, focused childhood training. "If we understand that most world-class performers were not that remarkable or exceptional in their early years, this implies that early exceptional performance is not a prerequisite for long-term, world-class performance," he says.

Statistics underscore the disconnect between youth and adult success: 82 percent of international-level junior athletes do not reach that level as adults, and 72 percent of senior international athletes did not achieve junior international status. Only about 10 percent of adult high achievers were top youth performers, and vice versa.

Examples illustrate this pattern. While Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Tiger Woods, Gukesh Dommaraju, and Terence Tao were child prodigies, Ludwig van Beethoven, Michael Jordan, Viswanathan Anand, and Charles Darwin were not. The studies covered Olympic athletes, Nobel laureates, top chess players, and renowned composers.

Compared to 66 studies on young and sub-elite performers, traits like early specialization and rapid progress are often absent or reversed among world-class adults. Broader early experiences may foster flexible learning and better discipline matches, reducing risks of burnout or injury, Güllich explains. "In essence, they find an optimal discipline match and they enhance their learning capital for future long-term learning."

David Feldon at Utah State University praises the review for distinguishing early success from sustained elite performance. "It certainly does develop expertise and leads to quick gains," he says, "but I don’t know that it’s ultimately productive for people over their lifespans."

Güllich suggests rethinking programs that fast-track young talents, advocating instead for encouraging multiple disciplines over years to nurture long-term excellence. The findings appear in Science (DOI: 10.1126/science.adt7790).

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