速度任务中的双重任务成本:精英冰球运动员、开放技能运动员和封闭技能运动员之间的比较

Mark Brinkbäumer, Christian Kupper, Lukas Reichert, Karen Zentgraf
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摘要

冰上曲棍球是一项要求球员综合运用多种技能的高节奏运动。球员要同时面对感知、认知和运动任务;因此,球员经常面临双重或多重任务要求。事实证明,双重任务会导致一项或两项任务的表现下降。成绩下降的程度可能受认知资源耗竭的影响。有关结合运动相关元素的双重任务范例的文献很少。因此,我们测试并验证了一种将下肢循环速度和同时进行的视觉语言速读结合起来的新型范式。此外,为了了解双重任务成本的性质,我们还评估了这些成本与认知表现之间的关系。我们假设所有运动员都存在双重任务成本,但与单一任务表现无关。双任务成本预计在开放技能和封闭技能运动之间以及不同的专业水平之间存在差异。共有 322 名精英运动员(120 名冰上曲棍球运动员、165 名其他团队运动项目运动员、37 名封闭技能运动项目运动员)参与了这项研究。每位运动员都同时完成了敲击任务、视觉语言速读任务以及两项任务。所有冰球运动员都进行了额外的认知测试,评估处理速度、空间工作记忆、持续注意力、二选一反应时间和运动抑制。单任务成绩和双任务成本呈弱正相关。单因素方差分析显示,封闭技能运动项目运动员的成本明显高于冰球和其他运动项目运动员。在不同专业水平的团队之间,双重任务成本没有明显差异。我们的研究表明,这种新颖的双任务范式成功地诱导了所有精英运动员的双任务成本。我们的研究表明,这种新颖的双任务范式成功地诱导了所有精英运动员的双任务成本。由于它能区分封闭技能和开放技能的运动员,因此它可能是开放技能运动员成绩和人才培养的一种有价值的诊断工具。双任务成本无法通过认知表现测量进行相关预测,这对认知资源理论作为双任务成本的解释提出了质疑。
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Dual-task costs in speed tasks: a comparison between elite ice hockey, open-skill and closed-skill sports athletes
Ice hockey is a high pace sports game that requires players to integrate multiple skills. Players face perceptive, cognitive, and motor tasks concurrently; hence, players are regularly exposed to dual- or multi-task demands. Dual-tasking has been shown to lead to decreased performance in one or both performed tasks. The degree of performance reductions might be modulated by the exhaustion of cognitive resources. Literature on dual-task paradigms that combine sport-relevant elements is scarce. Therefore, a novel paradigm combining cyclical speed of the lower extremities and concurrent visuo-verbal speed reading was tested and validated. Additionally, to understand the nature of dual-task costs, the relationship between these costs and cognitive performance was assessed. We hypothesized occurrence of dual-task costs in all athletes without relationship to single task performance. Differences in dual-task cost were expected between open-skill and closed-skill sports, as well as differing expertise levels. Level of cognitive function was expected to explain some variance in dual-task cost.A total of 322 elite athletes (120 ice hockey, 165 other team sports, 37 closed-skill sports) participated in this study. Each athlete performed a tapping task, a visuo-verbal speed-reading task, and both tasks simultaneously. All ice hockey athletes performed additional cognitive tests assessing processing speed, spatial working memory, sustained attention, two choice reaction time, and motor inhibition.The results of paired-sample t-tests confirmed significant dual-task costs for all sport groups (p < 0.001). Single-task performance and dual-task costs correlated weakly in a positive direction. A one-way ANOVA revealed significantly greater costs in closed-skill sports athletes than in ice hockey and other sports athletes. No significant differences in dual-task costs were found between teams of differing expertise levels. Lastly, no significant regression model was found to predict dual-task costs from cognitive test performance.Our study suggests that this novel dual-task paradigm was successful in inducing dual-task costs for all elite athletes. Since it distinguishes between closed-skill and open-skill sports athletes, it might be a valuable diagnostic tool for performance and for talent development of open-skill athletes. Dual-task costs could not be relevantly predicted via cognitive performance measures, questioning cognitive resource theories as an explanation for dual-task costs.
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