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Journal Article

Citation

Mann DL, Ho NY, De Souza NJ, Watson DR, Taylor SJ. Hum. Mov. Sci. 2007; 26(3): 343-356.

Affiliation

School of Optometry and Vision Science, University of New South Wales, NSW 2052, Australia. d.mann@unsw.edu.au

Copyright

(Copyright © 2007, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.humov.2006.12.003

PMID

17289195

Abstract

The importance of optimal visual function in demanding interceptive tasks is far from established. The aim of the study was to determine whether induced myopic blur and hence sub-optimal visual function would give rise to a detrimental effect on performance in the execution of an interceptive task. The batting performance of grade level cricket players was assessed facing a bowling machine whilst wearing contact lenses of four different refractive conditions (plano (nil), +1.00, +2.00 and +3.00D over-refraction), inducing increasing amounts of myopic blur. Performance for each condition was assessed based both on the shot quality against each delivery judged by a qualified cricket coach blind to each condition, along with an evaluation of the quality of ball-bat contact for each delivery. No significant change was found in batting performance with the introduction of +1.00 and +2.00D of induced myopic blur. A +3.00D over-correction was required before any significant decrease in batting performance was detected, demonstrating that batters needed to be essentially legally blind (as simulated through the use of the +3.00D over-refraction) before there was any significant measurable decrement in batting performance. We concluded that optimal visual correction is not necessarily required for optimal performance in a demanding interceptive task, and that the human perceptual-motor system is capable of compensating for marked alterations in input.


Language: en

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