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Journal Article

Citation

Ballester R, Huertas F, Uji M, Bennett SJ. Sci. Rep. 2017; 7(1): e17898.

Affiliation

Research Institute for Sport & Exercise Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1038/s41598-017-18092-5

PMID

29263340

Abstract

We compared coincidence-anticipation performance in normal vision and stroboscopic vision as a function of time-on-task. Participants estimated the arrival time of a real object that moved with constant acceleration (-0.7, 0, +0.7ā€‰m/s2) in a pseudo-randomised order across 4 blocks of 30 trials in both vision conditions, received in a counter-balanced order. Participants (nā€‰=ā€‰20) became more errorful (accuracy and variability) in the normal vision condition as a function of time-on-task, whereas performance was maintained in the stroboscopic vision condition. We interpret these data as showing that participants failed to maintain coincidence-anticipation performance in the normal vision condition due to monotony and attentional underload. In contrast, the stroboscopic vision condition placed a greater demand on visual-spatial memory for motion extrapolation, and thus participants did not experience the typical vigilance decrement in performance. While short-term adaptation effects from practicing in stroboscopic vision are promising, future work needs to consider for how long participants can maintain effortful processing, and whether there are negative carry-over effects from cognitive fatigue when transferring to normal vision.


Language: en

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