Department of Psychology, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
Sports Med. 2010 Mar 1;40(3):183-7. doi: 10.2165/11319440-000000000-00000.
Recent concussion research has led to the development of computerized test batteries designed to measure working memory and psychomotor speed deficits in acute stage post-concussion. These tests lack a measure of motor control deficits, which may linger well after other symptoms have remitted. For athletes, this may mean returning to play while still uncoordinated or neurologically fragile. The present research involved the development of a visuomotor pointing task designed to induce a speed-accuracy trade off to measure motor planning and execution performance in concussed athletes. Data collected using this tool were contrasted with CogSport, a commercially available computerized test battery designed to assess residual cognitive effects of concussion in athletes. Results suggest that a motor task may be able to detect long-term effects of concussion not measurable with CogSport. If future research can confirm these findings, we suggest that a measure of motor control may need to be added to existing batteries to improve their sensitivity to long term effects.
最近的脑震荡研究导致了计算机测试电池的发展,旨在测量急性脑震荡后阶段的工作记忆和心理运动速度缺陷。这些测试缺乏运动控制缺陷的测量,而这些缺陷可能会在其他症状消退后很久仍然存在。对于运动员来说,这可能意味着在仍然不协调或神经脆弱的情况下重返赛场。本研究涉及开发一种视觉运动指向任务,旨在诱导速度-准确性权衡,以测量脑震荡运动员的运动计划和执行表现。使用该工具收集的数据与 CogSport 进行了对比,CogSport 是一种商业上可用的计算机测试电池,旨在评估运动员脑震荡的残留认知影响。结果表明,运动任务可能能够检测到 CogSport 无法测量的脑震荡的长期影响。如果未来的研究能够证实这些发现,我们建议在现有的电池中添加运动控制的测量,以提高其对长期影响的敏感性。