Mechanisms of Action Anticipation in Table Tennis Players: A Multivoxel Pattern Analysis Study

•Brain activation assessed during action anticipation in table tennis experts vs. novices.•MVPA distinguished experts from novices with 90.48% accuracy during action anticipation.•Regions involved in conflict monitoring or motor cognition distinguished expert/novice.•Findings suggest roles for all t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuroscience 2024-05, Vol.546, p.33-40
Hauptverfasser: Ji, Qingchun, Liu, Likai, Lu, Yingzhi, Zhou, Chenglin, Wang, Yingying
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Brain activation assessed during action anticipation in table tennis experts vs. novices.•MVPA distinguished experts from novices with 90.48% accuracy during action anticipation.•Regions involved in conflict monitoring or motor cognition distinguished expert/novice.•Findings suggest roles for all these brain regions in action anticipation in experts. An exceptional ability to accurately anticipate an opponent’s action is paramount for competitive athletes and highlights their experiential mastery. Despite conventional associations of action observation with specific brain regions, neuroimaging discrepancies persist. To explore the brain regions and neural mechanisms undergirding action anticipation, we compared distinct brain activation patterns involved in table tennis serve anticipation of expert table tennis athletes vs. non-experts by using both univariate analysis and multivoxel pattern analysis (MVPA). We collected functional magnetic resonance imaging data from 29 table tennis experts and 34 non-experts as they pressed a button to predict the trajectory of a ball in a table tennis serve video truncated at the moment of racket-ball contact vs. pressing any button while viewing a static image of the first video frame. MVPA was applied to assess whether it could accurately differentiate experts from non-experts. MVPA results indicated moderate accuracy (90.48%) for differentiating experts from non-experts. Brain regions contributing most to the differentiation included the left cerebellum, the vermis, the right middle temporal pole, the inferior parietal cortex, the bilateral paracentral lobule, and the left supplementary motor area. The findings suggest that brain regions associated with cognitive conflict monitoring and motor cognition contribute to the action anticipation ability of expert table tennis players.
ISSN:0306-4522
1873-7544
DOI:10.1016/j.neuroscience.2024.03.016