The Effect of Modification Psychomotor Tasks in the Virtual Reality on Cadence and Behavioural Responses of Cycling

Virtual reality is an alternative tool to provide a safe and competitive environment, especially for training and competitions. This study aims to evaluate the effects of modified psychomotor tasks in the virtual reality on the alpha/beta ratio, power output, heart rate, and cadence. The participant...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:International Journal of Human Movement and Sports Sciences
Main Author: Zainuddin N.F.; Jamaludin M.N.; Zulkapri I.; Hasan H.; Ibrahim H.; Miswan M.S.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Horizon Research Publishing 2022
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85131873435&doi=10.13189%2fsaj.2022.100309&partnerID=40&md5=e280d031b4c5f9449c02997f9844d6b9
id 2-s2.0-85131873435
spelling 2-s2.0-85131873435
Zainuddin N.F.; Jamaludin M.N.; Zulkapri I.; Hasan H.; Ibrahim H.; Miswan M.S.
The Effect of Modification Psychomotor Tasks in the Virtual Reality on Cadence and Behavioural Responses of Cycling
2022
International Journal of Human Movement and Sports Sciences
10
3
10.13189/saj.2022.100309
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85131873435&doi=10.13189%2fsaj.2022.100309&partnerID=40&md5=e280d031b4c5f9449c02997f9844d6b9
Virtual reality is an alternative tool to provide a safe and competitive environment, especially for training and competitions. This study aims to evaluate the effects of modified psychomotor tasks in the virtual reality on the alpha/beta ratio, power output, heart rate, and cadence. The participants are recruited among national development cyclists from National Sport School. The environment of virtual reality was modified from the available virtual reality TACX smart trainer system. The one-way multivariate of variance (MANOVA) identified the effects of the five different levels of psychomotor task (independent variables) in virtual reality on multiple variables of physiological responses. The MANOVA results indicate a statistically significant multivariate main effect for the five levels of task difficulty in road cycling, when jointly considering on the variables of alpha/beta ratio, power output, heart rate, and cadence. The multivariate general linear model for univariate ANOVA results demonstrates a significant difference between subject on alpha/beta ratio and cadence. Significant task pairwise differences were obtained for cadence between Task 1 and both Tasks 2 and 5. The results suggest human’s interaction with virtual reality, specifically during the psychomotor task during road cycling. The significant effects on the joint physiological responses ensured that evaluation of the experiment on developed task difficulty in virtual reality was practical, applicable and can be modified when required for training or assessment. The involvement of cognitive functions in response to behavioural mechanism merits further investigation and are deferred for future work. © 2022 by authors, all rights reserved.
Horizon Research Publishing
23814381
English
Article
All Open Access; Hybrid Gold Open Access
author Zainuddin N.F.; Jamaludin M.N.; Zulkapri I.; Hasan H.; Ibrahim H.; Miswan M.S.
spellingShingle Zainuddin N.F.; Jamaludin M.N.; Zulkapri I.; Hasan H.; Ibrahim H.; Miswan M.S.
The Effect of Modification Psychomotor Tasks in the Virtual Reality on Cadence and Behavioural Responses of Cycling
author_facet Zainuddin N.F.; Jamaludin M.N.; Zulkapri I.; Hasan H.; Ibrahim H.; Miswan M.S.
author_sort Zainuddin N.F.; Jamaludin M.N.; Zulkapri I.; Hasan H.; Ibrahim H.; Miswan M.S.
title The Effect of Modification Psychomotor Tasks in the Virtual Reality on Cadence and Behavioural Responses of Cycling
title_short The Effect of Modification Psychomotor Tasks in the Virtual Reality on Cadence and Behavioural Responses of Cycling
title_full The Effect of Modification Psychomotor Tasks in the Virtual Reality on Cadence and Behavioural Responses of Cycling
title_fullStr The Effect of Modification Psychomotor Tasks in the Virtual Reality on Cadence and Behavioural Responses of Cycling
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Modification Psychomotor Tasks in the Virtual Reality on Cadence and Behavioural Responses of Cycling
title_sort The Effect of Modification Psychomotor Tasks in the Virtual Reality on Cadence and Behavioural Responses of Cycling
publishDate 2022
container_title International Journal of Human Movement and Sports Sciences
container_volume 10
container_issue 3
doi_str_mv 10.13189/saj.2022.100309
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85131873435&doi=10.13189%2fsaj.2022.100309&partnerID=40&md5=e280d031b4c5f9449c02997f9844d6b9
description Virtual reality is an alternative tool to provide a safe and competitive environment, especially for training and competitions. This study aims to evaluate the effects of modified psychomotor tasks in the virtual reality on the alpha/beta ratio, power output, heart rate, and cadence. The participants are recruited among national development cyclists from National Sport School. The environment of virtual reality was modified from the available virtual reality TACX smart trainer system. The one-way multivariate of variance (MANOVA) identified the effects of the five different levels of psychomotor task (independent variables) in virtual reality on multiple variables of physiological responses. The MANOVA results indicate a statistically significant multivariate main effect for the five levels of task difficulty in road cycling, when jointly considering on the variables of alpha/beta ratio, power output, heart rate, and cadence. The multivariate general linear model for univariate ANOVA results demonstrates a significant difference between subject on alpha/beta ratio and cadence. Significant task pairwise differences were obtained for cadence between Task 1 and both Tasks 2 and 5. The results suggest human’s interaction with virtual reality, specifically during the psychomotor task during road cycling. The significant effects on the joint physiological responses ensured that evaluation of the experiment on developed task difficulty in virtual reality was practical, applicable and can be modified when required for training or assessment. The involvement of cognitive functions in response to behavioural mechanism merits further investigation and are deferred for future work. © 2022 by authors, all rights reserved.
publisher Horizon Research Publishing
issn 23814381
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Hybrid Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
_version_ 1809678024063320064