Timing of Gun Fire Influences Sprinters’ Multiple Joint Reaction Times of Whole Body in Block Start

Experienced sprinters are specifically adapted to pre-planning an advanced motor program. Herein, sprinters are able to immediately accelerate their center of mass forward with a whole-body coordinated motion, following a steady state crouched position. We examined the effect of variable timing of r...

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Main Authors: Mitsuo Otsuka, Toshiyuki Kurihara, Tadao Isaka
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2017-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
GRF
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00810/full
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spelling doaj-8157d5773e1149e9a01b38c6492429502020-11-25T00:48:03ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782017-05-01810.3389/fpsyg.2017.00810260727Timing of Gun Fire Influences Sprinters’ Multiple Joint Reaction Times of Whole Body in Block StartMitsuo OtsukaToshiyuki KuriharaTadao IsakaExperienced sprinters are specifically adapted to pre-planning an advanced motor program. Herein, sprinters are able to immediately accelerate their center of mass forward with a whole-body coordinated motion, following a steady state crouched position. We examined the effect of variable timing of reaction signals on multiple joint reaction times (RT) and whole-body RT for specialist sprinters. Twenty well-experienced male sprinters performed five start-dashes from a block start under five variable foreperiod (FP) length conditions (1.465, 1.622, 1.780, 1.938, and 2.096 s), with trials randomly timed between a warning and an imperative tone. Participants’ sprinting motion and ground reaction forces of their four limbs during the block start were measured simultaneously. Whole-body RT was significantly shorter when FP length was longer; the values of whole-body RT were 117 ± 5 ms, 129 ± 5 ms, 125 ± 4 ms, 133 ± 6 ms, and 156 ± 8 ms in the 2.096, 1.938, 1.780, 1.622, and 1.465-s FP-length conditions, respectively. A repeated-measures analysis of variance found a significant joint-by-FP length interaction in joint-moment RT. These findings suggest that FP length affects coordinated motion in four limbs and whole-body RT. This information will be able to lead to new methods for start signals in sprint running events and advance our understanding of the association between FP length and dynamic coordinated motion.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00810/fullwarning signalimperative signalforeperiodGRFmotion capture
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mitsuo Otsuka
Toshiyuki Kurihara
Tadao Isaka
spellingShingle Mitsuo Otsuka
Toshiyuki Kurihara
Tadao Isaka
Timing of Gun Fire Influences Sprinters’ Multiple Joint Reaction Times of Whole Body in Block Start
Frontiers in Psychology
warning signal
imperative signal
foreperiod
GRF
motion capture
author_facet Mitsuo Otsuka
Toshiyuki Kurihara
Tadao Isaka
author_sort Mitsuo Otsuka
title Timing of Gun Fire Influences Sprinters’ Multiple Joint Reaction Times of Whole Body in Block Start
title_short Timing of Gun Fire Influences Sprinters’ Multiple Joint Reaction Times of Whole Body in Block Start
title_full Timing of Gun Fire Influences Sprinters’ Multiple Joint Reaction Times of Whole Body in Block Start
title_fullStr Timing of Gun Fire Influences Sprinters’ Multiple Joint Reaction Times of Whole Body in Block Start
title_full_unstemmed Timing of Gun Fire Influences Sprinters’ Multiple Joint Reaction Times of Whole Body in Block Start
title_sort timing of gun fire influences sprinters’ multiple joint reaction times of whole body in block start
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2017-05-01
description Experienced sprinters are specifically adapted to pre-planning an advanced motor program. Herein, sprinters are able to immediately accelerate their center of mass forward with a whole-body coordinated motion, following a steady state crouched position. We examined the effect of variable timing of reaction signals on multiple joint reaction times (RT) and whole-body RT for specialist sprinters. Twenty well-experienced male sprinters performed five start-dashes from a block start under five variable foreperiod (FP) length conditions (1.465, 1.622, 1.780, 1.938, and 2.096 s), with trials randomly timed between a warning and an imperative tone. Participants’ sprinting motion and ground reaction forces of their four limbs during the block start were measured simultaneously. Whole-body RT was significantly shorter when FP length was longer; the values of whole-body RT were 117 ± 5 ms, 129 ± 5 ms, 125 ± 4 ms, 133 ± 6 ms, and 156 ± 8 ms in the 2.096, 1.938, 1.780, 1.622, and 1.465-s FP-length conditions, respectively. A repeated-measures analysis of variance found a significant joint-by-FP length interaction in joint-moment RT. These findings suggest that FP length affects coordinated motion in four limbs and whole-body RT. This information will be able to lead to new methods for start signals in sprint running events and advance our understanding of the association between FP length and dynamic coordinated motion.
topic warning signal
imperative signal
foreperiod
GRF
motion capture
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00810/full
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AT toshiyukikurihara timingofgunfireinfluencessprintersmultiplejointreactiontimesofwholebodyinblockstart
AT tadaoisaka timingofgunfireinfluencessprintersmultiplejointreactiontimesofwholebodyinblockstart
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