
doi: 10.48617/etd.1439
The present study aims to examine patterns in the performance measure outcomes of participants conducting both the Multiple Object Tracking Test (MOT) and the Visual Inverted Pendulum (VIP) tasks, in one unified study, to assess if individuals who tend to perform better in one task also tended to perform better in the other. Building on this foundation, this study seeks to explore the relationship between attentional capacity and balance control by integrating the MOT and VIP paradigms. Both tasks engage visual attention, with participants required to monitor on-screen visuals in real time. MOT serves as a well-established metric for selective and sustained attention, while VIP isolates higher-order cognitive contributions to motor control. By examining whether performance on MOT correlates with performance on VIP, we aim to help identify shared attentional processes underlying cognitive and motor tasks. Data were successfully collected and analyzed for 3 subjects, and correlations were plotted and computed, but statistical hypothesis test was not possible on such a small sample.
Clinical Psychology, executive function, selective attention, visual balance, multiple object tracking, sensorimotor control
Clinical Psychology, executive function, selective attention, visual balance, multiple object tracking, sensorimotor control
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