A Novel Approach to Assessment of Perceptual-Motor Efficiency and Training-Induced Improvement in the Performance Capabilities of Elite Athletes

Standard clinical assessments of mild traumatic brain injury are inadequate to detect subtle abnormalities that can be revealed by sophisticated diagnostic technology. An association has been observed between sport-related concussion (SRC) and subsequent musculoskeletal injury, but the underlying ne...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gary B. Wilkerson, Dustin C. Nabhan, Tyler S. Perry
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Sports and Active Living
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fspor.2021.729729/full
id doaj-05426dd8cbc64a6ab3de94ff6d4b8e51
record_format Article
spelling doaj-05426dd8cbc64a6ab3de94ff6d4b8e512021-10-01T05:53:44ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Sports and Active Living2624-93672021-10-01310.3389/fspor.2021.729729729729A Novel Approach to Assessment of Perceptual-Motor Efficiency and Training-Induced Improvement in the Performance Capabilities of Elite AthletesGary B. Wilkerson0Dustin C. Nabhan1Tyler S. Perry2Department of Health and Human Performance, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, Chattanooga, TN, United StatesOslo Sports Trauma Research Center, Norwegian School of Sport Science, Oslo, NorwayOrthopedics and Sports Medicine, Emory Healthcare, Atlanta, GA, United StatesStandard clinical assessments of mild traumatic brain injury are inadequate to detect subtle abnormalities that can be revealed by sophisticated diagnostic technology. An association has been observed between sport-related concussion (SRC) and subsequent musculoskeletal injury, but the underlying neurophysiological mechanism is not currently understood. A cohort of 16 elite athletes (10 male, 6 female), which included nine individuals who reported a history of SRC (5 male, 4 female) that occurred between 4 months and 8 years earlier, volunteered to participate in a 12-session program for assessment and training of perceptual-motor efficiency. Performance metrics derived from single- and dual-task whole-body lateral and diagonal reactive movements to virtual reality targets in left and right directions were analyzed separately and combined in various ways to create composite representations of global function. Intra-individual variability across performance domains demonstrated very good SRC history classification accuracy for the earliest 3-session phase of the program (Reaction Time Dispersion AUC = 0.841; Deceleration Dispersion AUC = 0.810; Reaction Time Discrepancy AUC = 0.825, Deceleration Discrepancy AUC = 0.794). Good earliest phase discrimination was also found for Composite Asymmetry between left and right movement directions (AUC = 0.778) and Excursion Average distance beyond the minimal body displacement necessary for virtual target deactivation (AUC = 0.730). Sensitivity derived from Youden's Index for the 6 global factors ranged from 67 to 89% and an identical specificity value of 86% for all of them. Median values demonstrated substantial improvement from the first 3-session phase to the last 3-session phase for Composite Asymmetry and Excursion Average. The results suggest that a Composite Asymmetry value ≥ 0.15 and an Excursion Average value ≥ 7 m, provide reasonable qualitative approximations for clinical identification of suboptimal perceptual-motor performance. Despite acknowledged study limitations, the findings support a hypothesized relationship between whole-body reactive agility performance and functional connectivity among brain networks subserving sensory perception, cognitive decision-making, and motor execution. A complex systems approach appears to perform better than traditional data analysis methods for detection of subtle perceptual-motor impairment, which has the potential to advance both clinical management of SRC and training for performance enhancement.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fspor.2021.729729/fullsport-related concussionmild traumatic brain injuryreactive agilitymusculoskeletal injuryintra-individual variabilityasymmetry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gary B. Wilkerson
Dustin C. Nabhan
Tyler S. Perry
spellingShingle Gary B. Wilkerson
Dustin C. Nabhan
Tyler S. Perry
A Novel Approach to Assessment of Perceptual-Motor Efficiency and Training-Induced Improvement in the Performance Capabilities of Elite Athletes
Frontiers in Sports and Active Living
sport-related concussion
mild traumatic brain injury
reactive agility
musculoskeletal injury
intra-individual variability
asymmetry
author_facet Gary B. Wilkerson
Dustin C. Nabhan
Tyler S. Perry
author_sort Gary B. Wilkerson
title A Novel Approach to Assessment of Perceptual-Motor Efficiency and Training-Induced Improvement in the Performance Capabilities of Elite Athletes
title_short A Novel Approach to Assessment of Perceptual-Motor Efficiency and Training-Induced Improvement in the Performance Capabilities of Elite Athletes
title_full A Novel Approach to Assessment of Perceptual-Motor Efficiency and Training-Induced Improvement in the Performance Capabilities of Elite Athletes
title_fullStr A Novel Approach to Assessment of Perceptual-Motor Efficiency and Training-Induced Improvement in the Performance Capabilities of Elite Athletes
title_full_unstemmed A Novel Approach to Assessment of Perceptual-Motor Efficiency and Training-Induced Improvement in the Performance Capabilities of Elite Athletes
title_sort novel approach to assessment of perceptual-motor efficiency and training-induced improvement in the performance capabilities of elite athletes
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Sports and Active Living
issn 2624-9367
publishDate 2021-10-01
description Standard clinical assessments of mild traumatic brain injury are inadequate to detect subtle abnormalities that can be revealed by sophisticated diagnostic technology. An association has been observed between sport-related concussion (SRC) and subsequent musculoskeletal injury, but the underlying neurophysiological mechanism is not currently understood. A cohort of 16 elite athletes (10 male, 6 female), which included nine individuals who reported a history of SRC (5 male, 4 female) that occurred between 4 months and 8 years earlier, volunteered to participate in a 12-session program for assessment and training of perceptual-motor efficiency. Performance metrics derived from single- and dual-task whole-body lateral and diagonal reactive movements to virtual reality targets in left and right directions were analyzed separately and combined in various ways to create composite representations of global function. Intra-individual variability across performance domains demonstrated very good SRC history classification accuracy for the earliest 3-session phase of the program (Reaction Time Dispersion AUC = 0.841; Deceleration Dispersion AUC = 0.810; Reaction Time Discrepancy AUC = 0.825, Deceleration Discrepancy AUC = 0.794). Good earliest phase discrimination was also found for Composite Asymmetry between left and right movement directions (AUC = 0.778) and Excursion Average distance beyond the minimal body displacement necessary for virtual target deactivation (AUC = 0.730). Sensitivity derived from Youden's Index for the 6 global factors ranged from 67 to 89% and an identical specificity value of 86% for all of them. Median values demonstrated substantial improvement from the first 3-session phase to the last 3-session phase for Composite Asymmetry and Excursion Average. The results suggest that a Composite Asymmetry value ≥ 0.15 and an Excursion Average value ≥ 7 m, provide reasonable qualitative approximations for clinical identification of suboptimal perceptual-motor performance. Despite acknowledged study limitations, the findings support a hypothesized relationship between whole-body reactive agility performance and functional connectivity among brain networks subserving sensory perception, cognitive decision-making, and motor execution. A complex systems approach appears to perform better than traditional data analysis methods for detection of subtle perceptual-motor impairment, which has the potential to advance both clinical management of SRC and training for performance enhancement.
topic sport-related concussion
mild traumatic brain injury
reactive agility
musculoskeletal injury
intra-individual variability
asymmetry
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fspor.2021.729729/full
work_keys_str_mv AT garybwilkerson anovelapproachtoassessmentofperceptualmotorefficiencyandtraininginducedimprovementintheperformancecapabilitiesofeliteathletes
AT dustincnabhan anovelapproachtoassessmentofperceptualmotorefficiencyandtraininginducedimprovementintheperformancecapabilitiesofeliteathletes
AT tylersperry anovelapproachtoassessmentofperceptualmotorefficiencyandtraininginducedimprovementintheperformancecapabilitiesofeliteathletes
AT garybwilkerson novelapproachtoassessmentofperceptualmotorefficiencyandtraininginducedimprovementintheperformancecapabilitiesofeliteathletes
AT dustincnabhan novelapproachtoassessmentofperceptualmotorefficiencyandtraininginducedimprovementintheperformancecapabilitiesofeliteathletes
AT tylersperry novelapproachtoassessmentofperceptualmotorefficiencyandtraininginducedimprovementintheperformancecapabilitiesofeliteathletes
_version_ 1716862061738196992