iScience (Oct 2023)

Total sleep deprivation reduces the table tennis anticipation performance of young men: A functional magnetic resonance imaging study

  • Cimin Dai,
  • Ziyi Peng,
  • Letong Wang,
  • Tao Song,
  • Lin Xu,
  • Mengmeng Xu,
  • Yongcong Shao

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 10
p. 107973

Abstract

Read online

Summary: This study explored whether and how sleep deprivation (SD) affects sport-related anticipation. Twenty table tennis players and 28 non-athletes completed a table tennis anticipation task before and after 36 h SD. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data were acquired simultaneously. The results showed that, compared with the non-athletes, table tennis players had higher neural efficiency, manifested by their higher anticipation accuracy and lower frontal lobe activation. SD impaired anticipation performance, accompanied by decreased activation of the occipital and temporal lobes. Compensatory activation occurred in the left hippocampus and orbital part of the right inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) after SD in the table tennis player group, but not in the non-athlete group. The decreased accuracy of non-athletes was positively correlated with decreased activation of orbital part of the right IFG. This study’s findings improve the understanding of the cognitive neuroscience mechanisms by which SD affects sport-related anticipation.

Keywords