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Selective Effect of Physical Fatigue on Motor Imagery Accuracy

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  • Franck Di Rienzo
  • Christian Collet
  • Nady Hoyek
  • Aymeric Guillot

Abstract

While the use of motor imagery (the mental representation of an action without overt execution) during actual training sessions is usually recommended, experimental studies examining the effect of physical fatigue on subsequent motor imagery performance are sparse and yielded divergent findings. Here, we investigated whether physical fatigue occurring during an intense sport training session affected motor imagery ability. Twelve swimmers (nine males, mean age 15.5 years) conducted a 45 min physically-fatiguing protocol where they swam from 70% to 100% of their maximal aerobic speed. We tested motor imagery ability immediately before and after fatigue state. Participants randomly imagined performing a swim turn using internal and external visual imagery. Self-reports ratings, imagery times and electrodermal responses, an index of alertness from the autonomic nervous system, were the dependent variables. Self-reports ratings indicated that participants did not encounter difficulty when performing motor imagery after fatigue. However, motor imagery times were significantly shortened during posttest compared to both pretest and actual turn times, thus indicating reduced timing accuracy. Looking at the selective effect of physical fatigue on external visual imagery did not reveal any difference before and after fatigue, whereas significantly shorter imagined times and electrodermal responses (respectively 15% and 48% decrease, p

Suggested Citation

  • Franck Di Rienzo & Christian Collet & Nady Hoyek & Aymeric Guillot, 2012. "Selective Effect of Physical Fatigue on Motor Imagery Accuracy," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 7(10), pages 1-11, October.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0047207
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0047207
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