Cardiac cycle oscillatory dynamics in a self-paced precision task

Research output: Contribution to conferenceAbstractpeer-review

Standard Standard

Cardiac cycle oscillatory dynamics in a self-paced precision task. / Gallicchio, Germano; Ryu, Donghyun; Pecunioso, Alessandra et al.
2024. Abstract from 10th International Conference On Movement, Health and Exercise & 14th Asia Conference of Kinesiology and Sport Science, Selangor, Malaysia.

Research output: Contribution to conferenceAbstractpeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Gallicchio, G, Ryu, D, Pecunioso, A & Jackson, R 2024, 'Cardiac cycle oscillatory dynamics in a self-paced precision task', 10th International Conference On Movement, Health and Exercise & 14th Asia Conference of Kinesiology and Sport Science, Selangor, Malaysia, 10/09/24 - 12/09/24. <https://ackmohe2024.tarc.edu.my/book-of-abstract>

APA

Gallicchio, G., Ryu, D., Pecunioso, A., & Jackson, R. (2024). Cardiac cycle oscillatory dynamics in a self-paced precision task. Abstract from 10th International Conference On Movement, Health and Exercise & 14th Asia Conference of Kinesiology and Sport Science, Selangor, Malaysia. https://ackmohe2024.tarc.edu.my/book-of-abstract

CBE

Gallicchio G, Ryu D, Pecunioso A, Jackson R. 2024. Cardiac cycle oscillatory dynamics in a self-paced precision task. Abstract from 10th International Conference On Movement, Health and Exercise & 14th Asia Conference of Kinesiology and Sport Science, Selangor, Malaysia.

MLA

Gallicchio, Germano et al. Cardiac cycle oscillatory dynamics in a self-paced precision task. 10th International Conference On Movement, Health and Exercise &amp; 14th Asia Conference of Kinesiology and Sport Science, 10 Sept 2024, Selangor, Malaysia, Abstract, 2024.

VancouverVancouver

Gallicchio G, Ryu D, Pecunioso A, Jackson R. Cardiac cycle oscillatory dynamics in a self-paced precision task. 2024. Abstract from 10th International Conference On Movement, Health and Exercise & 14th Asia Conference of Kinesiology and Sport Science, Selangor, Malaysia.

Author

Gallicchio, Germano ; Ryu, Donghyun ; Pecunioso, Alessandra et al. / Cardiac cycle oscillatory dynamics in a self-paced precision task. Abstract from 10th International Conference On Movement, Health and Exercise & 14th Asia Conference of Kinesiology and Sport Science, Selangor, Malaysia.

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Cardiac cycle oscillatory dynamics in a self-paced precision task

AU - Gallicchio, Germano

AU - Ryu, Donghyun

AU - Pecunioso, Alessandra

AU - Jackson, Robin

PY - 2024/9

Y1 - 2024/9

N2 - Purpose. A gradual and transient lengthening of the cardiac cycle (cardiac deceleration) is typically observed in the few seconds leading to self-paced precision actions and is reported as a feature of expertise. This study aimed to explore the time-frequency dynamics of this phenomenon.Method. Sixteen young adults of varying expertise (novices to experts) performed 60 golf putts at a 4-m distant target on a flat surface while their performance and electrocardiogram were recorded. We measured the intervals between consecutive R waves to examine variations in cardiac cycle length. We then applied continuous Morse wavelet transform to extract time-frequency normalized power and phase, respectively indicating the relative magnitude and the position of cardiac cycle oscillations. We used cluster-based permutation statistics to evaluate the linear correlation between cardiac cycle metrics and variable error of performance outcome as a reverse index of task precision.Results. Greater precision was associated with cardiac cycle lengthening (cardiac deceleration) not only in the final 5 s before movement but also around 10 s before movement and even with cardiac cycle shortening (cardiac acceleration) around 5 and 15 s before movement. Time-frequency analyses revealed that greater precision was associated with (a) lower normalized power for frequency content above 0.2 Hz and below 0.08 Hz, (b) greater cross-trial consistency of both normalized power and phase, and (c) a specific oscillatory phase consistent with a 0.15-Hz cardiac cycle lengthening beginning around 2.5 s before movement.Conclusion. This study provides evidence that the cardiac deceleration expertise effect may be part of a broader peripheral-nervous-system phenomenon consisting of 0.08-0.2 Hz oscillations, positioned in time so that the heart rate decelerates just before and during movement.

AB - Purpose. A gradual and transient lengthening of the cardiac cycle (cardiac deceleration) is typically observed in the few seconds leading to self-paced precision actions and is reported as a feature of expertise. This study aimed to explore the time-frequency dynamics of this phenomenon.Method. Sixteen young adults of varying expertise (novices to experts) performed 60 golf putts at a 4-m distant target on a flat surface while their performance and electrocardiogram were recorded. We measured the intervals between consecutive R waves to examine variations in cardiac cycle length. We then applied continuous Morse wavelet transform to extract time-frequency normalized power and phase, respectively indicating the relative magnitude and the position of cardiac cycle oscillations. We used cluster-based permutation statistics to evaluate the linear correlation between cardiac cycle metrics and variable error of performance outcome as a reverse index of task precision.Results. Greater precision was associated with cardiac cycle lengthening (cardiac deceleration) not only in the final 5 s before movement but also around 10 s before movement and even with cardiac cycle shortening (cardiac acceleration) around 5 and 15 s before movement. Time-frequency analyses revealed that greater precision was associated with (a) lower normalized power for frequency content above 0.2 Hz and below 0.08 Hz, (b) greater cross-trial consistency of both normalized power and phase, and (c) a specific oscillatory phase consistent with a 0.15-Hz cardiac cycle lengthening beginning around 2.5 s before movement.Conclusion. This study provides evidence that the cardiac deceleration expertise effect may be part of a broader peripheral-nervous-system phenomenon consisting of 0.08-0.2 Hz oscillations, positioned in time so that the heart rate decelerates just before and during movement.

KW - target sports

KW - cardiac deceleration

KW - electrocardiogram

KW - time-frequency analyses

M3 - Abstract

T2 - 10th International Conference On Movement, Health and Exercise &amp; 14th Asia Conference of Kinesiology and Sport Science

Y2 - 10 September 2024 through 12 September 2024

ER -