The effect of a virtual reality environment on gaze behaviour and motor skill learning

(Die Wirkung einer Virtual-Reality-Umgebung auf das Blickverhalten und das Erlernen motorischer Fähigkeiten)

Highlights: • VR is rapidly being adopted as a training method for visuomotor skills in sport. • Experiment 1 tested the effect of VR when used as a `warm-up` for golf putting. • Experiment 2 tested the effectiveness of learning the golf putt in VR. • VR caused temporary disruptions to quiet eye and putting accuracy (Expt 1). • Putting improvement was comparable between real-world and VR training (Expt 2). Abstract Objective: Virtual reality (VR) systems hold significant potential for training skilled behaviours and are currently receiving intense interest in the sporting domain. They offer both practical and pedagogical benefits, but there are concerns about the effect that perceptual deficiencies in VR systems (e.g. reduced haptic information, and stereoscopic display distortions) may have on learning and performance. `Specificity of learning` theories suggest that VR could be ineffective (or even detrimental) if important differences (e.g. perceptual deficiencies) exist between practice and real task performance conditions. Nevertheless, `structural learning` theories suggest VR could be a useful training tool, despite these deficiencies, because a trainee can still learn the underlying structure of the behaviour. We explored these theoretical predictions using golf putting as an exemplar skill. Method: In Experiment 1 we used a repeated measures design to assess putting accuracy (radial error) and quiet eye duration of expert golfers (n = 18) on real putts before and after 40 VR `warm up` putts. In Experiment 2, novice golfers (n = 40) were assigned to either VR or real-world putting training. Putting accuracy and quiet eye durations were then assessed on a real-world retention test. Results: Both visual guidance (quiet eye) and putting accuracy were disrupted temporarily when moving from VR to real putting (Experiment 1). However, real-world and VR practice produced comparable improvements in putting accuracy in novice golfers (Experiment 2). Conclusion: Overall, the results suggest that: (i) underlying skill structures can be learned in VR and transferred to the real-world; (ii) perceptual deficiencies will place limits on the use of VR. These findings demonstrate the challenges and opportunities for VR as a training tool, and emphasise the need to empirically test the costs and benefits of specific systems before deploying VR training.
© Copyright 2020 Psychology of Sport and Exercise. Elsevier. Alle Rechte vorbehalten.

Bibliographische Detailangaben
Schlagworte:
Notationen:Sozial- und Geisteswissenschaften Spielsportarten Nachwuchssport
Tagging:Quiet eye Putten visuomotorische Fähigkeit virtuelle Realität
Veröffentlicht in:Psychology of Sport and Exercise
Sprache:Englisch
Veröffentlicht: 2020
Online-Zugang:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychsport.2020.101721
Jahrgang:50
Heft:Sept.
Seiten:101721
Dokumentenarten:Artikel
Level:hoch