Individualized Mental Fatigue Does Not Impact Neuromuscular Function and Exercise Performance

被引:4
|
作者
Holgado, Darias [1 ,2 ,3 ,6 ]
Jolidon, Leo [3 ]
Borragan, Guillermo [4 ,5 ]
Sanabria, Daniel [1 ,2 ]
Place, Nicolas [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Granada, Mind Brain & Behav Res Ctr, Granada, Spain
[2] Univ Granada, Dept Expt Psychol, Granada, Spain
[3] Univ Lausanne, Inst Sport Sci, Quartier UNIL Ctr, Batiment Synathlon, Lausanne, Switzerland
[4] Univ Libre Bruxelles ULB, Ctr Rech Cognit & Neurosci, CRCN, Neuropsychol & Funct Neuroimaging Res Unit,UR2NF, Brussels, Belgium
[5] Univ Libre Bruxelles ULB, UNI ULB Neurosci Inst, Brussels, Belgium
[6] Univ Lausanne, Inst Sci Sport, Quartier UNIL Ctr, Batiment Synathlon, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
关键词
COGNITIVE LOAD; MAXIMAL VOLUNTARY CONTRACTION; MOTOR EVOKED POTENTIAL; EVOKED FORCE; NIRS; PERCEIVED EXERTION; PHYSICAL PERFORMANCE; PERCEPTION; EXERTION; TIME;
D O I
10.1249/MSS.0000000000003221
中图分类号
G8 [体育];
学科分类号
04 ; 0403 ;
摘要
Introduction: Recent studies have questioned previous empirical evidence that mental fatigue negatively impacts physical performance. The purpose of this study was to investigate the critical role of individual differences in mental fatigue susceptibility by analyzing the neurophysiological and physical responses to an individualized mental fatigue task. Methods: In a preregistered (https://osf.io/xc8nr/), randomized, within-participant design experiment, 22 recreational athletes completed a time to failure test at 80% of their peak power output under mental fatigue (individual mental effort) or control (low mental effort). Before and after the cognitive tasks, subjective feeling of mental fatigue, neuromuscular function of the knee extensors, and corticospinal excitability were measured. Sequential Bayesian analysis until it reached strong evidence in favor of the alternative hypothesis (BF10 > 6) or the null hypothesis (BF10 < 1/6) were conducted. Results: The individualizedmental effort task resulted in a higher subjective feeling of mental fatigue in the mental fatigue condition (0.50 (95% confidence interval (CI), 0.39-0.62)) arbitrary units compared with control (0.19 (95% CI, 0.06-0.339)) arbitrary unit. However, exercise performance was similar in both conditions (control: 410 (95% CI, 357-463) s vs mental fatigue: 422 (95% CI, 367-477) s, BF10 = 0.15). Likewise, mental fatigue did not impair knee extensor maximal force-generating capacity (BF10 = 0.928) and did not change the extent of fatigability or its origin after the cycling exercise. Conclusions: There is no evidence that mental fatigue adversely affects neuromuscular function or physical exercise; even if mental fatigue is individualized, computerized tasks seem not to affect physical performance.
引用
收藏
页码:1823 / 1834
页数:12
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