Original Research

Comparing visio-spatial intelligence in amateur rugby and netball players using hand-eye coordination tests

Lourens Millard, Gerrit J. Breukelman, Nonkululeko Mathe
African Vision and Eye Health | Vol 83, No 1 | a955 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/aveh.v83i1.955 | © 2024 Lourens Millard, Gerrit J. Breukelman, Nonkululeko Mathe | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 28 May 2024 | Published: 08 November 2024

About the author(s)

Lourens Millard, Department of Human Movement Science, Faculty of Science, Agriculture and Engineering, University of Zululand, Richards Bay, South Africa
Gerrit J. Breukelman, Department of Human Movement Science, Faculty of Science, Agriculture and Engineering, University of Zululand, Richards Bay, South Africa
Nonkululeko Mathe, Department of Human Movement Science, Faculty of Science, Agriculture and Engineering, University of Zululand, Richards Bay, South Africa

Abstract

Background: Research investigating the differences in visio-spatial skills (VSS) between athletes and non-athletes, as well as variations across sports, presents conflicting findings.

Aim: The objective of this study was to determine if there exist significant differences in visio-spatial intelligence (VSI) skills between rugby players and netball players, and whether such disparities are present when comparing both groups to non-athletes.

Setting: All participants, including the control group (non-athletes), rugby players and netball players, were recruited from the Zululand region of South Africa’s KwaZulu-Natal province, specifically from all premier league rugby and netball teams in the area.

Methods: Participants underwent an optometric assessment, followed by an evaluation of VSS using six established tests: The Hart Near Far Rock, saccadic eye movement, evasion, accumulator, flash memory and ball wall toss tests.

Results: The results revealed that rugby players significantly outperformed netball players in speed of recognition, peripheral awareness and hand-eye coordination (P = 0.000). Moreover, both rugby players and netball players performed significantly better than non-athletes in five of the six tests (P = 0.000), with the exception being the visual memory test (P = 0.809).

Conclusion: This discrepancy in performance suggests that certain VSS are superior in athletes compared to non-athletes, highlighting potential implications for theories of vision, test selection and the development of sport-specific VSS testing batteries. Furthermore, the use of a hand-eye coordination-specific VSS test battery effectively differentiated between different sports.

Contribution: The identified pattern was not consistent across all VSS tests, indicating that further research should explore the training methods employed by both sports, as these factors may contribute to the observed differences.


Keywords

visio-spatial intelligence (VSI); Rugby vision; netball vision; visual skills; sport

Sustainable Development Goal

Goal 3: Good health and well-being

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