Nonlinear Dynamics, Psychology, and Life Sciences, Vol. 27, Iss. 1, Jan, 2023, pp. 15-28 @2023 Society for Chaos Theory in Psychology & Life Sciences Fractal Dynamics in a Whole-Body Dynamic Balance Sport, Slacklining: A Comparison of Novices and Experts Abstract: The present study investigated whether fractal dynamics can be observed during
single-leg standing on a slackline. We also examined whether the temporal structure
differs with skill level. To address these questions, we compared single-leg standing
performance between novices (N=5) and experts (N=5) in terms of fractal dynamics in both
ankles (i.e., stance and swing legs), center of mass, and head acceleration time series
using detrended fluctuation analysis. Participants were required to perform single-leg
standing on a slackline. To collect motion data while slacklining, we used a
three-dimensional motion capture system and obtained time-series data on the position.
We conducted detrended fluctuation analysis on the original acceleration time series
and random shuffled time series to examine the fractal dynamics in each body part's
fluctuation. Results suggest that experts showed persistent temporal structure in the
swinging leg, center of mass, and head fluctuations in the horizontal direction, while
that of novices did not differ from random fluctuations. These findings revealed that
experts performing a single-leg standing task on a slackline show fractal dynamics. This
might reflect their flexible or adaptive exploratory behavior in the performer-environment
system and contribute to the dynamic stability of whole-body dynamic balancing. Keywords: whole-body coordination, dynamic stability, exploratory behavior, performer-environment system, detrended fluctuation analysis |