Influence of Spatial Accuracy Constraints on Reaction Time and Maximum Speed of Performance of Unilateral Movements

The goal was to study reaction time and maximal velocity of upper limbs of healthy young adults of both sexes during transition from a simple to a more involved task. Performance of dominant and non-dominant arms was recorded. Participants were 43 healthy, right-handed, untrained men (n = 22) and wo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Perceptual and motor skills 2015-04, Vol.120 (2), p.519-533
Hauptverfasser: Gutnik, B., Skurvydas, A., Zuoza, A., Zuoziene, I., Mickevičienė, D., Alekrinskis, B. A., Pukenas, K., Nash, D.
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container_end_page 533
container_issue 2
container_start_page 519
container_title Perceptual and motor skills
container_volume 120
creator Gutnik, B.
Skurvydas, A.
Zuoza, A.
Zuoziene, I.
Mickevičienė, D.
Alekrinskis, B. A.
Pukenas, K.
Nash, D.
description The goal was to study reaction time and maximal velocity of upper limbs of healthy young adults of both sexes during transition from a simple to a more involved task. Performance of dominant and non-dominant arms was recorded. Participants were 43 healthy, right-handed, untrained men (n = 22) and women (n = 21), 18–22 years old. The simple task required a single jerk-like movement. The involved task required both speed and accuracy where necessity for high speed of performance was emphasized. The effectiveness of transition between tasks was calculated for both reaction time and maximal velocity. No lateral differences were found. Men usually had a shorter reaction time on both tasks and a higher maximal velocity in the simple task. Women were more effective at modifying velocity.
doi_str_mv 10.2466/25.PMS.120v10x3
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subjects Accuracy
Adolescent
Adult
Female
Functional Laterality - physiology
Human performance
Humans
Male
Movement
Psychomotor Performance - physiology
Reaction Time - physiology
Sex Factors
Space Perception - physiology
Task analysis
Velocity
Young Adult
Young adults
title Influence of Spatial Accuracy Constraints on Reaction Time and Maximum Speed of Performance of Unilateral Movements
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