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Proposed framework for forecasting heat-effects on motor-cognitive performance in the Summer Olympics

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Auteur
Piil J.F., Kingma B., Morris N.B., Christiansen L., Ioannou L.G., Flouris A.D., Nybo L.
Date
2021
Language
en
DOI
10.1080/23328940.2021.1957367
Sujet
Article
athlete
climate change
cognition
cognitive model
competition
decision making
dehydration
fatigue
forecasting
heat stress
human
hyperthermia
Japan
motor performance
physiological stress
solar radiation
summer
sun exposure
Routledge
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Résumé
Heat strain impairs performance across a broad spectrum of sport disciplines. The impeding effects of hyperthermia and dehydration are often ascribed to compromised cardiovascular and muscular functioning, but expert performance also depends on appropriately tuned sensory, motor and cognitive processes. Considering that hyperthermia has implications for central nervous system (CNS) function and fatigue, it is highly relevant to analyze how heat stress forecasted for the upcoming Olympics may influence athletes. This paper proposes and demonstrates the use of a framework combining expected weather conditions with a heat strain and motor-cognitive model to analyze the impact of heat and associated factors on discipline- and scenario-specific performances during the Tokyo 2021 games. We pinpoint that hyperthermia-induced central fatigue may affect prolonged performances and analyze how hyperthermia may impair complex motor-cognitive performance, especially when accompanied by either moderate dehydration or exposure to severe solar radiation. Interestingly, several short explosive performances may benefit from faster cross-bridge contraction velocities at higher muscle temperatures in sport disciplines with little or no negative heat-effect on CNS fatigue or motor-cognitive performance. In the analyses of scenarios and Olympic sport disciplines, we consider thermal impacts on “motor-cognitive factors” such as decision-making, maximal and fine motor-activation as well as the influence on central fatigue and pacing. From this platform, we also provide perspectives on how athletes and coaches can identify risks for their event and potentially mitigate negative motor-cognitive effects for and optimize performance in the environmental settings projected. © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11615/78216
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