Pursue or shoot? Effects of exercise-induced fatigue on the transition from running to rifle shooting in a pursuit task

To investigate to what degree exercise-induced fatigue influences behavioural choices, participants' transition from running to rifle shooting in a pursue-and-shoot task was assessed. Participants ran on a treadmill and chased a target in a virtual environment and were free to choose when to stop the treadmill and shoot at the target. Fatigue increased progressively throughout the 20-minute test. Results indicated that shooting accuracy was not affected by fatigue. However, the distance to the target at which participants decided to shoot showed a U-shaped relationship with fatigue, R² = 0.884, p = 0.013. At low fatigue levels (ratings of perceived exertion [RPE] < 6.5), the distance to the target at which participants shot decreased, whereas at higher fatigue levels (RPE > 6.5) shooting distance increased again. At high levels of fatigue, participants stopped running sooner, aimed at the target longer and shot less often. Findings indicate that physiological parameters influence not only perception but also actual transitions between different actions. Practitioner Summary: This study was conducted to investigate to what degree exercise-induced fatigue influences behavioural choices. This is an original research article. Our major finding is that physiological parameters influence not only perceptual estimates of action possibilities but also actual behaviours and transitions between different actions.
© Copyright 2013 Ergonomics. Taylor & Francis. Published by Taylor & Francis. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:training science endurance sports technical sports
Published in:Ergonomics
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis 2013
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1080/00140139.2013.847213
Volume:56
Issue:12
Pages:1877-1888
Document types:article
Level:advanced