Literature DB >> 22941722

Fooling the kickers but not the goalkeepers: behavioral and neurophysiological correlates of fake action detection in soccer.

Enzo Tomeo1, Paola Cesari, Salvatore M Aglioti, Cosimo Urgesi.   

Abstract

Studies demonstrate that elite athletes are able to extract kinematic information of observed domain-specific actions to predict their future course. Little is known, however, on the perceptuo-motor processes and neural correlates of the athletes' ability to predict fooling actions. Combining psychophysics and transcranial magnetic stimulation, we explored the impact of motor and perceptual expertise on the ability to predict the fate of observed actual or fake soccer penalty kicks. We manipulated the congruence between the model's body kinematics and the subsequent ball trajectory and investigated the prediction performance and cortico-spinal reactivity of expert kickers, goalkeepers, and novices. Kickers and goalkeepers outperformed novices by anticipating the actual kick direction from the model's initial body movements. However, kickers were more often fooled than goalkeepers and novices in cases of incongruent actions. Congruent and incongruent actions engendered a comparable facilitation of kickers' lower limb motor representation, but their neurophysiological response was correlated with their greater susceptibility to be fooled. Moreover, when compared with actual actions, motor facilitation for incongruent actions was lower among goalkeepers and higher among novices. Thus, responding to fooling actions requires updation of simulative motor representations of others' actions and is facilitated by visual rather than by motor expertise.

Keywords:  action prediction; deceptive actions; mirror neurons; sport; transcranial magnetic stimulation

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22941722     DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhs279

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cereb Cortex        ISSN: 1047-3211            Impact factor:   5.357


  33 in total

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9.  Predicting the fate of basketball throws: an EEG study on expert action prediction in wheelchair basketball players.

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Authors:  Desmond Mulligan; Keith R Lohse; Nicola J Hodges
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