| Literature DB >> 34504043 |
Jeromy M Alt1, Adam W Kiefer2, Ryan MacPherson2, Tehran J Davis1, Paula L Silva1.
Abstract
Athletes commonly make decisions about the passability of closing gaps when navigating sport environments. This study examined whether increased temporal pressure to arrive at a desired location modifies these decisions. Thirty participants navigated toward a waypoint in a virtual, sport-inspired environment. To do so, they had to decide whether they could pass through closing gaps of virtual humans (and take the shortest route) or steer around them (and take a longer route). The decision boundary of participants who were time pressured to arrive at a waypoint was biased toward end gaps of smaller sizes and was less reliably defined, resulting in a higher number of collisions. Effects of temporal pressure were minimized with experience in the experimental task. Results indicate that temporal pressure affects perceptual-motor processes supporting information pickup and shapes the information-action coupling that drives compliance with navigation demands. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: affordance; collision risk; gap passage; virtual reality
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34504043 DOI: 10.1123/jsep.2020-0320
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Sport Exerc Psychol ISSN: 0895-2779 Impact factor: 3.016