Assessing ocular activity during performance of motor skills using electrooculography
journal contribution
posted on 2020-11-24, 10:06 authored by Germano Gallicchio, A Cooke, C Ring© 2018 The Authors. Psychophysiology published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Society for Psychophysiological Research Eye-tracking research has revealed that, compared to novices, experts make longer ocular fixations on the target of an action when performing motor skills; that is, they have a longer quiet eye. Remarkably, the reason why a longer quiet eye aids movement has yet to be established. There is a need for interdisciplinary research and new measures to accelerate progress on the mechanistic understanding of the phenomenon. With the aim to provide researchers with new tools, we assessed the utility of electrooculography (EOG) to examine ocular activity while 10 experts and 10 novices putted golf balls. We measured quiet eye durations, distinguishing its pre- and postmovement initiation components, and developed a novel time-varying index of ocular activity, eye quietness, computed as the variability of the EOG in short time intervals: lower values correspond with greater quietness. Finally, we measured movement durations using a combination of infrared and sound sensors. Experts had longer postmovement initiation quiet eye compared to novices; however, total and premovement quiet eye durations did not differ between groups. Eye quietness was inversely correlated with quiet eye duration, and was greatest immediately after movement initiation. Importantly, movement duration correlated positively with postmovement initiation quiet eye and negatively with eye quietness shortly after movement initiation. This study demonstrates the utility of assessing ocular activity during performance of motor skills using EOG. Additionally, these findings provide evidence that expert–novice differences in ocular activity may reflect differences in the kinematics (e.g., movement duration) of how experts and novices execute motor skills.
Funding
University of Birmingham ESRC Doctoral Training Centre DTG 2011
Economic and Social Research Council
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School
- Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences
Published in
PsychophysiologyVolume
55Issue
7Article number
e13070Publisher
wileyVersion
- VoR (Version of Record)
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© The authorsPublisher statement
This is an Open Access Article. It is published by Wiley under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported Licence (CC BY). Full details of this licence are available at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Acceptance date
2018-01-20Publication date
2018-02-09Copyright date
2018ISSN
0048-5772eISSN
1469-8986Publisher version
Language
- en
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Deposit date: 20 November 2020Usage metrics
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EOGeye quietnessgolf puttingocular behaviorquiet eyeSocial SciencesScience & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicinePsychology, BiologicalNeurosciencesPhysiologyPsychologyPsychology, ExperimentalNeurosciences & NeurologyQUIET EYECONFIDENCE-INTERVALSATTENTIONAL FOCUSONLINE CONTROLEXPERTISEGAZEAdultBiomechanical PhenomenaElectrooculographyEye MovementsFixation, OcularHumansMaleMotor SkillsYoung AdultExperimental PsychologyBiological SciencesMedical and Health SciencesPsychology and Cognitive Sciences
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