Unconscious information processing of table tennis athletes in a masked priming paradigm: an event-related potentials (ERP) study

Background Unconscious information processing is enhanced among athletes for sports-specific contexts. Whether this enhancement is transferable to general contexts is unknown. This study explored unconscious information processing and brain activity in highly trained table tennis athletes and non-at...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fanying Meng, Lijiao Chen, Chun Xie, Jiadong Zheng, Ning Chen, Fanghui Qiu, Jiaxian Geng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2025-05-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/19508.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850140179262603264
author Fanying Meng
Lijiao Chen
Chun Xie
Jiadong Zheng
Ning Chen
Fanghui Qiu
Jiaxian Geng
author_facet Fanying Meng
Lijiao Chen
Chun Xie
Jiadong Zheng
Ning Chen
Fanghui Qiu
Jiaxian Geng
author_sort Fanying Meng
collection DOAJ
description Background Unconscious information processing is enhanced among athletes for sports-specific contexts. Whether this enhancement is transferable to general contexts is unknown. This study explored unconscious information processing and brain activity in highly trained table tennis athletes and non-athletes in general contexts. Methods Twenty table tennis athletes (six females, mean age = 20.38 ± 1.28, mean ± standard error) and 21 aged-matched college students (eight females, mean age = 19.81 ± 1.29) were recruited for this study. Each participant first performed a masked priming task. In this task, a prime stimulus (arrows pointing left or right) was presented, followed by a visual mask (arrows pointing in both directions) and then a target stimulus, the target stimulus consisted of arrows pointing in the same direction as the prime for congruent stimuli or in the opposite direction for incongruent trials, while the P3 component of the event-related potential was simultaneously recorded in the brain. As a control, participants then performed a prime identification task (the subjective threshold test and the objective threshold test) to determine whether they could consciously detect the priming arrows. Reaction times, error rates, P3 latency and P3 peak amplitude were analyzed to examine the unconscious information processing of table tennis athletes in general contexts. Results Participants responded with the direction of the target arrow and were not consciously aware of the priming stimulus. Athletes responded faster in comparison of non-athletes. Athletes and non-athletes responded faster and committed fewer errors in incongruent vs. congruent conditions. In addition, the years of table tennis training were negatively correlated with the magnitude of negative compatibility effect. Both groups displayed longer P3 latencies, a measure of inhibitory control, in the incongruent vs. congruent trials. However, athletes displayed higher P3 peak amplitudes, reflecting larger attention resource input, and longer P3 latencies than non-athletes in central brain sites. Conclusion Unconscious information processing among table tennis athletes is not prominent in general contexts, but may be limited to the sports-specific context or more complex cognitive tasks.
format Article
id doaj-art-9fd2f8fd8cbf4a5faef3f6726ffc4007
institution OA Journals
issn 2167-8359
language English
publishDate 2025-05-01
publisher PeerJ Inc.
record_format Article
series PeerJ
spelling doaj-art-9fd2f8fd8cbf4a5faef3f6726ffc40072025-08-20T02:29:55ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592025-05-0113e1950810.7717/peerj.19508Unconscious information processing of table tennis athletes in a masked priming paradigm: an event-related potentials (ERP) studyFanying Meng0Lijiao Chen1Chun Xie2Jiadong Zheng3Ning Chen4Fanghui Qiu5Jiaxian Geng6Institute of Physical Education, Huzhou University, Huzhou, ChinaHuzhou Sports School, Unaffiliated, Huzhou, ChinaDepartment of Physical Education, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, ChinaInstitute of Physical Education, Huzhou University, Huzhou, ChinaInstitute of Physical Education, Huzhou University, Huzhou, ChinaDepartment of Physical Education, Qingdao University, Qingdao, ChinaInstitute of Physical Education, Huzhou University, Huzhou, ChinaBackground Unconscious information processing is enhanced among athletes for sports-specific contexts. Whether this enhancement is transferable to general contexts is unknown. This study explored unconscious information processing and brain activity in highly trained table tennis athletes and non-athletes in general contexts. Methods Twenty table tennis athletes (six females, mean age = 20.38 ± 1.28, mean ± standard error) and 21 aged-matched college students (eight females, mean age = 19.81 ± 1.29) were recruited for this study. Each participant first performed a masked priming task. In this task, a prime stimulus (arrows pointing left or right) was presented, followed by a visual mask (arrows pointing in both directions) and then a target stimulus, the target stimulus consisted of arrows pointing in the same direction as the prime for congruent stimuli or in the opposite direction for incongruent trials, while the P3 component of the event-related potential was simultaneously recorded in the brain. As a control, participants then performed a prime identification task (the subjective threshold test and the objective threshold test) to determine whether they could consciously detect the priming arrows. Reaction times, error rates, P3 latency and P3 peak amplitude were analyzed to examine the unconscious information processing of table tennis athletes in general contexts. Results Participants responded with the direction of the target arrow and were not consciously aware of the priming stimulus. Athletes responded faster in comparison of non-athletes. Athletes and non-athletes responded faster and committed fewer errors in incongruent vs. congruent conditions. In addition, the years of table tennis training were negatively correlated with the magnitude of negative compatibility effect. Both groups displayed longer P3 latencies, a measure of inhibitory control, in the incongruent vs. congruent trials. However, athletes displayed higher P3 peak amplitudes, reflecting larger attention resource input, and longer P3 latencies than non-athletes in central brain sites. Conclusion Unconscious information processing among table tennis athletes is not prominent in general contexts, but may be limited to the sports-specific context or more complex cognitive tasks.https://peerj.com/articles/19508.pdfUnconscious information processingGeneral cognitiveMasked priming paradigmTable tennis athletesERP
spellingShingle Fanying Meng
Lijiao Chen
Chun Xie
Jiadong Zheng
Ning Chen
Fanghui Qiu
Jiaxian Geng
Unconscious information processing of table tennis athletes in a masked priming paradigm: an event-related potentials (ERP) study
PeerJ
Unconscious information processing
General cognitive
Masked priming paradigm
Table tennis athletes
ERP
title Unconscious information processing of table tennis athletes in a masked priming paradigm: an event-related potentials (ERP) study
title_full Unconscious information processing of table tennis athletes in a masked priming paradigm: an event-related potentials (ERP) study
title_fullStr Unconscious information processing of table tennis athletes in a masked priming paradigm: an event-related potentials (ERP) study
title_full_unstemmed Unconscious information processing of table tennis athletes in a masked priming paradigm: an event-related potentials (ERP) study
title_short Unconscious information processing of table tennis athletes in a masked priming paradigm: an event-related potentials (ERP) study
title_sort unconscious information processing of table tennis athletes in a masked priming paradigm an event related potentials erp study
topic Unconscious information processing
General cognitive
Masked priming paradigm
Table tennis athletes
ERP
url https://peerj.com/articles/19508.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT fanyingmeng unconsciousinformationprocessingoftabletennisathletesinamaskedprimingparadigmaneventrelatedpotentialserpstudy
AT lijiaochen unconsciousinformationprocessingoftabletennisathletesinamaskedprimingparadigmaneventrelatedpotentialserpstudy
AT chunxie unconsciousinformationprocessingoftabletennisathletesinamaskedprimingparadigmaneventrelatedpotentialserpstudy
AT jiadongzheng unconsciousinformationprocessingoftabletennisathletesinamaskedprimingparadigmaneventrelatedpotentialserpstudy
AT ningchen unconsciousinformationprocessingoftabletennisathletesinamaskedprimingparadigmaneventrelatedpotentialserpstudy
AT fanghuiqiu unconsciousinformationprocessingoftabletennisathletesinamaskedprimingparadigmaneventrelatedpotentialserpstudy
AT jiaxiangeng unconsciousinformationprocessingoftabletennisathletesinamaskedprimingparadigmaneventrelatedpotentialserpstudy