The effects of fatiguing exercise and load carriage on the perception and initiation of movement

Perceptual-motor coordination relies on the accurate coupling of the perceptual and movement systems. However, individuals must also be able to recalibrate to perturbations to perceptual and movement capabilities. We examined the effects of fatigue and load carriage on perceptual-motor coordination...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of sport science 2021-01, Vol.21 (1), p.36-44
Hauptverfasser: Johnson, Caleb D., Eagle, Shawn R., Nindl, Bradley C., Lovalekar, Mita T., Flanagan, Shawn D., Pepping, Gert-Jan, Connaboy, Christopher
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container_end_page 44
container_issue 1
container_start_page 36
container_title European journal of sport science
container_volume 21
creator Johnson, Caleb D.
Eagle, Shawn R.
Nindl, Bradley C.
Lovalekar, Mita T.
Flanagan, Shawn D.
Pepping, Gert-Jan
Connaboy, Christopher
description Perceptual-motor coordination relies on the accurate coupling of the perceptual and movement systems. However, individuals must also be able to recalibrate to perturbations to perceptual and movement capabilities. We examined the effects of fatigue and load carriage on perceptual-motor coordination for a maximal leaping task. 23 participants completed an incremental fatigue protocol (light to fatiguing intensity stages) on two separate occasions (loaded/unloaded). At baseline and the end of every stage of the protocol, participants made perceptual judgments for the affordance of leaping. The accuracy of responses and reaction times were calculated and mean differences were assessed across exercise intensity and load carriage conditions. No interaction of exercise intensity and load carriage was detected, or main effect of load carriage. A main, quadratic effect of exercise intensity was detected on reaction times, with times decreasing through the moderate stage and increasing through post-fatigue. No effect of exercise/fatigue was detected on perceptual accuracy. The results indicate that exercise at high intensities through fatigue has a significant effect on perceptual-motor calibration. Contrastingly, in response to an action-scaled task, individuals can adequately recalibrate to increased load carriage.
doi_str_mv 10.1080/17461391.2020.1725137
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source Taylor & Francis; MEDLINE; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Adult
Affordance
Age Factors
Exercise - physiology
Fatigue - physiopathology
Female
Heart Rate - physiology
Humans
Male
Movement - physiology
Perception
perception-action
perceptual-motor coordination
Psychomotor Performance - physiology
Reaction Time
Warm-Up Exercise - physiology
Weight-Bearing - physiology
Young Adult
title The effects of fatiguing exercise and load carriage on the perception and initiation of movement
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