Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Brain Information Science in Sports, Center for Education in Liberal Arts and Science Osaka University Toyonaka Japan
2. Graduate School of Frontier of Biosciences Osaka University Toyonaka Japan
3. Graduate School of Medicine Osaka University Toyonaka Japan
4. Faculty of Sports Science Fukuoka University Fukuoka Japan
Abstract
AbstractVisual perception is formed over time through the formation process and visual pathway. Exercise improves visual perception, but it is unclear whether exercise modulates nonspecifically or specifically the formation process and pathway of visual perception. Healthy young men performed the visual detection task in a backward masking paradigm before and during cycling exercise at a mild intensity or rest (control). The task presented gratings of a circular patch (target) and annulus (mask) arranged concentrically as a visual stimulus and asked if the presence and striped pattern (feature) of the target were detected. The relationship between the orientations of the gratings of the target and the mask included iso‐orientation and orthogonal orientation to investigate the orientation selectivity of the masking effect. The masking effect was evaluated by perceptual suppressive index (PSI). Exercise improved feature detection (∆PSI; Exercise: −20.6%, Control: 1.7%) but not presence detection (∆PSI; Exercise: 8.9%, Control: 29.6%) compared to the control condition, and the improving effect resulted from the attenuation of the non‐orientation‐selective (∆PSI; Exercise: −29.0%, Control: 16.8%) but not orientation‐selective masking effect (∆PSI; Exercise: −3.1%, Control: 11.7%). These results suggest that exercise affects the formation process of the perceptual feature of the target stimulus by suppressively modulating the neural networks responsible for the non‐orientation‐selective surround interaction in the subcortical visual pathways, whose effects are inherited by the cortical visual pathways necessary for perceptual image formation. In conclusion, our findings suggest that acute exercise improves visual perception transiently through the modulation of a specific formation process of visual processing.
Funder
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science