Visuomotor coordination with gaze, head and arm movements during table tennis forehand rallies

The purpose of this study was to clarify the temporal coordination between gaze, head, and arm movements during forehand rallies in table tennis. Collegiate male table tennis players (n = 7) conducted forehand rallies at a constant tempo (100, 120, and 150 bpm) using a metronome. In each tempo condi...

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Published inEuropean journal of sport science Vol. 24; no. 6; pp. 750 - 757
Main Authors Shinkai, Ryosuke, Ando, Shintaro, Nonaka, Yuki, Kizuka, Tomohiro, Ono, Seiji
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Germany 01.06.2024
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Summary:The purpose of this study was to clarify the temporal coordination between gaze, head, and arm movements during forehand rallies in table tennis. Collegiate male table tennis players (n = 7) conducted forehand rallies at a constant tempo (100, 120, and 150 bpm) using a metronome. In each tempo condition, participants performed 30 strokes (a total of 90 strokes). Gaze, head, and dominant arm (shoulder, elbow, and wrist) movements were recorded with an eye‐tracking device equipped with a Gyro sensor and a 3‐D motion capture system. The results showed that the effect of head movements relative to gaze movements was significantly higher than that of eye movements in the three tempo conditions. Our results indicate that head movements are closely associated with gaze movements during rallies. Furthermore, cross‐correlation coefficients (CCs) between head and arm movements were more than 0.96 (maximum coefficient: 0.99). In addition, head and arm movements were synchronized during rallies. Finally, CCs between gaze and arm movements were more than 0.74 (maximum coefficient: 0.99), indicating that gaze movements are temporally coordinated with arm movements. Taken together, head movements could play important roles not only in gaze tracking but also in the temporal coordination with arm movements during table tennis forehand rallies. Highlights This study examined temporal coordination between gaze, head, and arm movements during table tennis rallies. Head movements were closely associated with gaze movements, suggesting that head movements play important roles in gaze tracking during rallies. Head and gaze movements were temporally coordinated with arm movements. This result suggests that head movements could also play important roles in the temporal coordination with arm movements during rallies.
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ISSN:1746-1391
1536-7290
1536-7290
DOI:10.1002/ejsc.12098