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Multifractality in postural sway supports quiet eye training in aiming tasks: A study of golf putting
Affiliation:1. Department of Kinesiology, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Greensboro, NC, USA;2. Division of Sports Medicine, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH, USA;3. Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, USA;4. Center for Cognition, Action, and Perception, Department of Psychology, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, USA;5. Gait and Motion Analysis Laboratory, Providence VA Medical Center, Providence, RI, USA;6. Department of Cognitive, Linguistic & Psychological Sciences, Brown University, Providence, RI, USA;1. Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, Foothills Medical Centre, 1403 29th Street NW, Room 1023 North Tower, Calgary, AB P2N 2T9, Canada;2. Faculty of Kinesiology, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada
Abstract:The ‘quiet eye’ (QE) approach to visually-guided aiming behavior invests fully in perceptual information's potential to organize coordinated action. Sports psychologists refer to QE as the stillness of the eyes during aiming tasks and increasingly into self- and externally-paced tasks. Amidst the ‘noisy’ fluctuations of the athlete's body, quiet eyes might leave fewer saccadic interruptions to the coupling between postural sway and optic flow. Postural sway exhibits fluctuations whose multifractal structure serves as a robust predictor of visual and haptic perceptual responses. Postural sway generates optic flow centered on an individual's eye height. We predicted that perturbing the eye height by attaching wooden blocks below the feet would perturb the putting more so in QE-trained participants than participants trained technically. We also predicted that QE's efficacy and responses to perturbation would depend on multifractality in postural sway. Specifically, we predicted that less multifractality would predict more adaptive responses to the perturbation and higher putting accuracy. Results showed that lower multifractality led to more accurate putts, and the perturbation of eye height led to less accurate putts, particularly for QE-trained participants. Models of radial error (i.e., the distance between the ball's final position and the hole) indicated that lower estimates of multifractality due to nonlinearity coincided with a more adaptive response to the perturbation. These results suggest that reduced multifractality may act in a context-sensitive manner to restrain motoric degrees of freedom to achieve the task goal.
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