Complex motor imagery in elite female ice hockey players: a cortical arena of imagination revealed by magnetoencephalography
Audrey Alice Potts, Luis Garcia Dominguez, David Gold, Mary Pat McAndrews, Richard Wennberg

TL;DR
Elite female ice hockey players use brain visualization techniques, and this study identifies a specific brain region activated during such mental exercises.
Contribution
This study identifies a consistent posterior left hemisphere brain region activated during complex motor imagery in elite athletes.
Findings
A posterior left hemisphere cortical region around the intraparietal sulcus was consistently activated during motor imagery.
The same brain region was reliably activated in all eight participants during the visualization task.
The identified brain region may represent the neural substrate for conscious thought during motor imagery.
Abstract
Motor imagery (MI), or “visualization,” as practiced by elite athletes to improve performance, provides a model of how covert thought—imagination—can affect subsequent behavior. In this exploratory magnetoencephalography (MEG) study, we aimed to identify the brain regions involved in complex MI in a small sample of elite female ice hockey players experienced in visualization. Using an experimental block design, the athletes visualized a specific PETTLEP (physical, environment, task, timing, learning, emotion, perspective)-guided scripted ice hockey play while being monitored with MEG. A frequency-domain beamformer was then calculated to contrast the MEG data from the imagery condition with two different control (resting state or mental counting) conditions. Significance was assessed using a cluster-based permutation test. The beamforming results identified a principal hub of neural…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSport Psychology and Performance · Action Observation and Synchronization · Creativity in Education and Neuroscience
