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Music Alters Conscious Distance Monitoring without Changing Pacing and Performance during a Cycling Time Trial

Athletes use their own perception to monitor distance and regulate their pace during exercise, avoiding premature fatigue before the endpoint. On the other hand, they may also listen to music while training and exercising. Given the potential role of music as a distractor, we verified if music influ...

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Published in:International journal of environmental research and public health 2023-02, Vol.20 (5), p.3890
Main Authors: Vasconcelos, Gustavo C, Brietzke, Cayque, Franco-Alvarenga, Paulo E, Hettinga, Florentina J, Pires, Flávio O
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Brietzke, Cayque
Franco-Alvarenga, Paulo E
Hettinga, Florentina J
Pires, Flávio O
description Athletes use their own perception to monitor distance and regulate their pace during exercise, avoiding premature fatigue before the endpoint. On the other hand, they may also listen to music while training and exercising. Given the potential role of music as a distractor, we verified if music influenced the athletes' ability to monitor the distance covered during a 20-km cycling time trial (TT20km). We hypothesized that music would elongate cyclists' perceived distance due to reduced attentional focus on exercise-derived signals, which would also change their ratings of perceived exertion (RPE). We also expected that the motivational role of music would also be beneficial in pacing and performance. After familiarization sessions, ten recreational cyclists performed an in-laboratory TT20km while either listening to music or not (control). They reported their RPE, associative thoughts to exercise (ATE), and motivation when they each perceived they had completed 2-km. Power output and heart rate (HR) were continuously recorded. Cyclists elongated their distance perception with music, increasing the distance covered for each perceived 2 km ( = 0.003). However, music reduced the error of conscious distance monitoring ( = 0.021), pushing the perceived distance towards the actual distance. Music increased the actual distance-RPE relationship ( = 0.004) and reduced ATE ( < 0.001). However, music affected neither performance assessed as mean power output ( = 0.564) and time ( = 0.524) nor psychophysiological responses such as HR ( = 0.066), RPE ( = 0.069), and motivation ( = 0.515). Cyclists elongated their distance perception during the TT20km and changed the actual distance-RPE relationship, which is likely due to a music-distractive effect. Although there was a reduced error of conscious distance monitoring, music affected neither pacing nor performance.
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source Publicly Available Content Database; PubMed Central; Free Full-Text Journals in Chemistry
subjects Athletes
Attention
Auditory Perception
Bicycling
Bicycling - physiology
Cycles
Cycling
Cyclists
Depth perception
Elongation
Error reduction
Exercise - physiology
Fatigue
Headphones
Heart beat
Heart rate
Heart Rate - physiology
Humans
Listening
Monitoring
Music
Perception
Perceptions
Physical Exertion - physiology
Space perception
Warm up (exercise)
title Music Alters Conscious Distance Monitoring without Changing Pacing and Performance during a Cycling Time Trial
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