» Articles » PMID: 12826107

Fixation Stability and Saccadic Latency in élite Shooters

Overview
Journal Vision Res
Specialty Ophthalmology
Date 2003 Jun 27
PMID 12826107
Citations 27
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

This study tested the hypothesis that elementary visuo-motor functions involved in visual scanning, as measured by fixation and saccadic tasks, are better in a group of high-level clay target shooters (N=7) than in a control group (N=8). In the fixation task, subject were told to keep fixation as still as possible on a target for 1 min, both in the presence and absence of distracters. For shooters, time did not have an effect on fixation stability, and they had more stable fixation than controls in the distracters condition. Results indicate a difference between groups on both the temporal span of attention and selective attention. In the saccadic task, subjects were asked to saccade, as fast as possible, towards a peripherally displayed target. Two conditions were used: simple reaction to target onset and discrimination between targets and distracters. Shooters had faster saccadic latency to targets than controls in both conditions. Finally, to evaluate the effect of exercise on saccadic latency, we trained one control subject to saccade to a target displayed at a constant spatial position. At the end of the training, saccadic latency reached a value comparable to that recorded in shooters. Learning was largely retinotopic, not showing transfer to untrained spatial positions.

Citing Articles

Interocular Timing Differences in Horizontal Saccades of Ball Game Players.

Kokubu M, Komatsu Y, Kojima T Vision (Basel). 2025; 9(1).

PMID: 39982326 PMC: 11843894. DOI: 10.3390/vision9010009.


Individual differences in baseline eye movement indices: Examining the relationships between baseline pupil size, inhibitory control, and fixation stability.

Zhou J, Lin M, Xu W Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci. 2024; 24(6):1084-1095.

PMID: 39198300 DOI: 10.3758/s13415-024-01213-9.


Application of a New Device for Vision Relaxation in Computer Users.

Svede A, Semjonova S, Ganebnaya A, Puhova L, Baig K, Kucika A Vision (Basel). 2024; 8(3).

PMID: 39051226 PMC: 11270284. DOI: 10.3390/vision8030040.


Table tennis players use superior saccadic eye movements to track moving visual targets.

Nakazato R, Aoyama C, Komiyama T, Himo R, Shimegi S Front Sports Act Living. 2024; 6:1289800.

PMID: 38406764 PMC: 10884183. DOI: 10.3389/fspor.2024.1289800.


Cognitive function and heart rate variability in open and closed skill sports.

Chakraborty S, Suryavanshi C, Nayak K Ann Med. 2023; 55(2):2267588.

PMID: 37824224 PMC: 10572042. DOI: 10.1080/07853890.2023.2267588.