Cognitive load impairs athletes' subliminal processing: behavioral and neural insights
Xuechen Mao, Jinbin Chen, Yanglan Yu, Qin Huang, Jilong Shi

TL;DR
This study shows that high cognitive load reduces athletes' ability to process subliminal information, affecting both behavior and brain activity.
Contribution
The study is the first to investigate how cognitive load affects subliminal processing in athletes using both behavioral and neural measures.
Findings
Cognitive load significantly reduced subliminal priming effects in response time (p = 0.001).
P3 amplitude and pre-stimulus alpha power also decreased with increasing cognitive load (p < 0.01).
The results suggest cognitive load consumes available resources needed for subliminal processing.
Abstract
Athletes who play interactive sports are required to effectively process information under high cognitive loads. A growing body of research has shown that cognitive loading impairs athletes' supraliminal information processing, but few studies have focused on effects on subliminal processing. This study aimed to test the hypothesis that an increase in cognitive load impairs athletes' subliminal processing and its neural characteristics. Thirty national-level table tennis athletes (15 males; mean age 20.47 years) performed a dual-task paradigm (experimental), in which an N-back task was combined with a masked priming task. Subliminal priming effects were calculated using behavioral and electroencephalographic data to reflect subliminal processing levels. The behavioral observations showed a significant decrease in the subliminal priming effect (i.e., response time) with increasing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSport Psychology and Performance · Neural and Behavioral Psychology Studies · Sports Performance and Training
