Motor expertise modulates unconscious rather than conscious executive control

Background Executive control, the ability to regulate the execution of a goal-directed task, is an important element in an athlete’s skill set. Although previous studies have shown that executive control in athletes is better than that in non-athletes, those studies were mainly confined to conscious...

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Main Authors: Fanying Meng, Anmin Li, Yihong You, Chun Xie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2019-02-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/6387.pdf
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spelling doaj-07f88aa1d0794ee3be294f1af7deac252020-11-24T23:32:46ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592019-02-017e638710.7717/peerj.6387Motor expertise modulates unconscious rather than conscious executive controlFanying Meng0Anmin Li1Yihong You2Chun Xie3Department of Sport Psychology, School of Kinesiology, Shanghai University of Sport, Shanghai, ChinaDepartment of Sport Psychology, School of Kinesiology, Shanghai University of Sport, Shanghai, ChinaDepartment of Sport Psychology, School of Kinesiology, Shanghai University of Sport, Shanghai, ChinaDepartment of Sport Psychology, School of Kinesiology, Shanghai University of Sport, Shanghai, ChinaBackground Executive control, the ability to regulate the execution of a goal-directed task, is an important element in an athlete’s skill set. Although previous studies have shown that executive control in athletes is better than that in non-athletes, those studies were mainly confined to conscious executive control. Many recent studies have suggested that executive control can be triggered by the presentation of visual stimuli without participant’s conscious awareness. However, few studies have examined unconscious executive control in sports. Thus, the present study investigated whether, similar to conscious executive control, unconscious executive control in table tennis athletes is superior to that in non-athletes. Methods In total, 42 age-matched undergraduate students were recruited for this study; 22 nonathletic students lacking practical athletic experience comprised one group, and 20 table tennis athletes with many years of training in this sport comprised a second group. Each participant first completed an unconscious response priming task, the unconscious processing of visual-spatial information, and then completed a conscious version of this same response priming task. Results Table tennis athletes showed a significant response priming effect, whereas non-athletes did not, when participants were unable to consciously perceive the visual-spatial priming stimuli. In addition, the number of years the table tennis athletes had trained in this sport (a measure of their motor expertise) was positively correlated with the strength of the unconscious response priming effect. However, both table tennis athletes and non-athletes showed a response priming effect when the primes were unmasked and the participants were able to consciously perceive the visual-spatial priming stimuli. Conclusion Our results suggest that motor expertise modulates unconscious, rather than conscious, executive control and that motor expertise is positively correlated with unconscious executive control in table tennis athletes.https://peerj.com/articles/6387.pdfMotor expertiseUnconscious executive controlConscious executive controlTable tennis athletes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fanying Meng
Anmin Li
Yihong You
Chun Xie
spellingShingle Fanying Meng
Anmin Li
Yihong You
Chun Xie
Motor expertise modulates unconscious rather than conscious executive control
PeerJ
Motor expertise
Unconscious executive control
Conscious executive control
Table tennis athletes
author_facet Fanying Meng
Anmin Li
Yihong You
Chun Xie
author_sort Fanying Meng
title Motor expertise modulates unconscious rather than conscious executive control
title_short Motor expertise modulates unconscious rather than conscious executive control
title_full Motor expertise modulates unconscious rather than conscious executive control
title_fullStr Motor expertise modulates unconscious rather than conscious executive control
title_full_unstemmed Motor expertise modulates unconscious rather than conscious executive control
title_sort motor expertise modulates unconscious rather than conscious executive control
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Background Executive control, the ability to regulate the execution of a goal-directed task, is an important element in an athlete’s skill set. Although previous studies have shown that executive control in athletes is better than that in non-athletes, those studies were mainly confined to conscious executive control. Many recent studies have suggested that executive control can be triggered by the presentation of visual stimuli without participant’s conscious awareness. However, few studies have examined unconscious executive control in sports. Thus, the present study investigated whether, similar to conscious executive control, unconscious executive control in table tennis athletes is superior to that in non-athletes. Methods In total, 42 age-matched undergraduate students were recruited for this study; 22 nonathletic students lacking practical athletic experience comprised one group, and 20 table tennis athletes with many years of training in this sport comprised a second group. Each participant first completed an unconscious response priming task, the unconscious processing of visual-spatial information, and then completed a conscious version of this same response priming task. Results Table tennis athletes showed a significant response priming effect, whereas non-athletes did not, when participants were unable to consciously perceive the visual-spatial priming stimuli. In addition, the number of years the table tennis athletes had trained in this sport (a measure of their motor expertise) was positively correlated with the strength of the unconscious response priming effect. However, both table tennis athletes and non-athletes showed a response priming effect when the primes were unmasked and the participants were able to consciously perceive the visual-spatial priming stimuli. Conclusion Our results suggest that motor expertise modulates unconscious, rather than conscious, executive control and that motor expertise is positively correlated with unconscious executive control in table tennis athletes.
topic Motor expertise
Unconscious executive control
Conscious executive control
Table tennis athletes
url https://peerj.com/articles/6387.pdf
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