Influence of sports experience on distribution of pro-saccade reaction time under gap condition

Abstract Background Previous studies indicated that substantial individual variation exists in the distribution of pro-saccade reaction times under gap condition. To investigate the influence of sports experience on the distribution, we examined distribution of the pro-saccade reaction time under ov...

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Main Authors: Kenji Kunita, Katsuo Fujiwara
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2022-01-01
Series:Journal of Physiological Anthropology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40101-022-00277-1
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author Kenji Kunita
Katsuo Fujiwara
author_facet Kenji Kunita
Katsuo Fujiwara
author_sort Kenji Kunita
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Previous studies indicated that substantial individual variation exists in the distribution of pro-saccade reaction times under gap condition. To investigate the influence of sports experience on the distribution, we examined distribution of the pro-saccade reaction time under overlap and gap conditions, for the basketball club, table tennis club, and non-sporting control groups. Methods Subjects performed pro-saccade tasks under the overlap and gap conditions, in which the intentional and reflexive disengagement of fixation are important, respectively. Under the overlap condition, the central fixation point was illuminated for a random duration of 1–3 s, then the fixation point was turned off. Just after the switch-off of the fixation point, one of the peripheral targets was illuminated for a duration of 1 s. The visual stimulus under the gap condition was almost the same as that under the overlap condition. However, only the temporal gap between the switch-off of the fixation point and the onset of the target differed between those conditions. The gap duration in the gap condition was set at 200 ms. The mean of median value of the bandwidth showing the earliest peak in the histogram was calculated for each group. Thereafter, for each subject, the bandwidth showing the earliest peak under the gap condition was defined as the criterion bandwidth (0 ms bandwidth). Based on this criterion bandwidth, the mean of the relative frequency was calculated for every 10 ms of bandwidth, for the overlap and gap conditions, in each group. Results Under the overlap condition, for all subjects, the pro-saccade reaction times showed unimodal distribution. The means of the median value of the bandwidth showing the earliest peak for the basketball and table tennis groups (approximate 170 ms) were significantly earlier than that for the control group (approximate 190 ms). Under the gap condition, the distribution was bimodal for 11 of 15 subjects in the basketball group and for 5 of 15 subjects in the control group. In the table tennis group, the distribution was not bimodal but unimodal for all 15 subjects. For the basketball group, mean of the relative frequency showed bimodal distribution with approximate 120 ms and 170 ms peaks. For the table tennis and control groups, the mean of the relative frequency showed unimodal distribution with approximate 130 ms and 140ms peak, respectively. Conclusions The present study indicated that under the gap condition, the sports experience influenced on the distribution of the pro-saccade reaction time. The pro-saccade reaction time under the condition would show a distinct bimodal distribution for the basketball group and show a distinct and early unimodal distribution for the table tennis group. It was suggested that the physiological factor leading the group difference in the distribution was the effect of sports experience on the disengagement function of fixation.
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spelling doaj.art-2ba32abc30be488cab4821cffaa4bb352022-12-21T16:43:04ZengBMCJournal of Physiological Anthropology1880-68052022-01-0141111210.1186/s40101-022-00277-1Influence of sports experience on distribution of pro-saccade reaction time under gap conditionKenji Kunita0Katsuo Fujiwara1Department of Sports Instruction, Faculty of Sports and Human, Sapporo International UniversityDepartment of Sports Science, Kanazawa Gakuin UniversityAbstract Background Previous studies indicated that substantial individual variation exists in the distribution of pro-saccade reaction times under gap condition. To investigate the influence of sports experience on the distribution, we examined distribution of the pro-saccade reaction time under overlap and gap conditions, for the basketball club, table tennis club, and non-sporting control groups. Methods Subjects performed pro-saccade tasks under the overlap and gap conditions, in which the intentional and reflexive disengagement of fixation are important, respectively. Under the overlap condition, the central fixation point was illuminated for a random duration of 1–3 s, then the fixation point was turned off. Just after the switch-off of the fixation point, one of the peripheral targets was illuminated for a duration of 1 s. The visual stimulus under the gap condition was almost the same as that under the overlap condition. However, only the temporal gap between the switch-off of the fixation point and the onset of the target differed between those conditions. The gap duration in the gap condition was set at 200 ms. The mean of median value of the bandwidth showing the earliest peak in the histogram was calculated for each group. Thereafter, for each subject, the bandwidth showing the earliest peak under the gap condition was defined as the criterion bandwidth (0 ms bandwidth). Based on this criterion bandwidth, the mean of the relative frequency was calculated for every 10 ms of bandwidth, for the overlap and gap conditions, in each group. Results Under the overlap condition, for all subjects, the pro-saccade reaction times showed unimodal distribution. The means of the median value of the bandwidth showing the earliest peak for the basketball and table tennis groups (approximate 170 ms) were significantly earlier than that for the control group (approximate 190 ms). Under the gap condition, the distribution was bimodal for 11 of 15 subjects in the basketball group and for 5 of 15 subjects in the control group. In the table tennis group, the distribution was not bimodal but unimodal for all 15 subjects. For the basketball group, mean of the relative frequency showed bimodal distribution with approximate 120 ms and 170 ms peaks. For the table tennis and control groups, the mean of the relative frequency showed unimodal distribution with approximate 130 ms and 140ms peak, respectively. Conclusions The present study indicated that under the gap condition, the sports experience influenced on the distribution of the pro-saccade reaction time. The pro-saccade reaction time under the condition would show a distinct bimodal distribution for the basketball group and show a distinct and early unimodal distribution for the table tennis group. It was suggested that the physiological factor leading the group difference in the distribution was the effect of sports experience on the disengagement function of fixation.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40101-022-00277-1Pro-saccade reaction timeDistributionGap conditionOverlap conditionSports experience
spellingShingle Kenji Kunita
Katsuo Fujiwara
Influence of sports experience on distribution of pro-saccade reaction time under gap condition
Journal of Physiological Anthropology
Pro-saccade reaction time
Distribution
Gap condition
Overlap condition
Sports experience
title Influence of sports experience on distribution of pro-saccade reaction time under gap condition
title_full Influence of sports experience on distribution of pro-saccade reaction time under gap condition
title_fullStr Influence of sports experience on distribution of pro-saccade reaction time under gap condition
title_full_unstemmed Influence of sports experience on distribution of pro-saccade reaction time under gap condition
title_short Influence of sports experience on distribution of pro-saccade reaction time under gap condition
title_sort influence of sports experience on distribution of pro saccade reaction time under gap condition
topic Pro-saccade reaction time
Distribution
Gap condition
Overlap condition
Sports experience
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40101-022-00277-1
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