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Dive into the research topics where Luis Augusto Teixeira is active.

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Featured researches published by Luis Augusto Teixeira.


Cortex | 2008

Categories of manual asymmetry and their variation with advancing age

Luis Augusto Teixeira

Manual asymmetries were analyzed in 18- to 63-year-old right-handers in different motor tasks. This analysis aimed at describing the asymmetry profile for each task and assessing their stability across ages. For this purpose, performance of the right and left hands were analyzed in the following aspects: simple reaction time, rate of sequential finger movements, maximum grip force, accuracy in anticipatory timing, rate of repetitive tapping, and rate of drawing movements. In addition, stability of manual preference across ages was assessed through the Edinburgh inventory (Oldfield, 1971). The results indicated different profiles of manual asymmetry, with identification of three categories across tasks: symmetric performance (asymmetry indices close to zero), inconsistent asymmetry (asymmetry indices variable in magnitude and direction), and consistent asymmetry (asymmetry indices favoring a single hand). The different profiles observed in the young adults were stable across ages with two exceptions: decreased lateral asymmetry for maximum grip force and increased asymmetry for sequential drawing in older individuals. These results indicate that manual asymmetries are task specific. Such task specificity is interpreted to be the result of different sensorimotor requirements imposed by each motor task in association with motor experiences accumulated over the lifetime. Analysis of manual preference showed that strength of preference for the right hand was greater in older individuals.


Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport | 2011

Leg Preference and Interlateral Asymmetry of Balance Stability in Soccer Players.

Luis Augusto Teixeira; Dalton Lustosa de Oliveira; Rosângela Guimarães Romano; Sônia Cavalcanti Côrrea

To examine the effect of long lasting practice on pedal behavior in sport, we compared experienced adult soccer players and nonsoccer players on leg preference in motor tasks requiring general mobilization, soccer related mobilization, and body balance stabilization. We also evaluated performance asymmetry between the right and left legs in static and dynamic unipedal body balance, based on center of pressure displacement, and correlated that with leg preference in balance stabilization tasks. Results revealed (a) a distinct leg preference between mobilization and stabilization tasks, which were significantly different between players and nonplayers, (b) similar balance stability between the right and left legs, (c) greater stability of experienced players compared with nonplayers in static and dynamic balance, and (d) absence of a significant leg preference correlation with interlateral balance asymmetry. These results suggest an effect of extensive soccer skill practice on establishing leg preference for specific mobilization tasks and overall balance control.


Laterality | 2003

Reduction of lateral asymmetries in dribbling: The role of bilateral practice

Luis Augusto Teixeira; Marcus Vinicius Silva; Maikel Carvalho

The influence of bilateral practice on the modification of well-established lateral asymmetries of performance was investigated in overlearned motor skills related to soccer in 12- to 14-year-old adolescent players. The participants had extensive practice before entering the experiment and were trained 2 hours per day, five times per week, during a period of 4 months. In the training, the participants were assigned to one of two groups: practice with emphasis on the preferred leg (PL), or practice with emphasis on the nonpreferred leg (NpL). Lateral asymmetries of performance were assessed before and after training on three motor tasks: kicking for force, kicking for accuracy, and speed of dribbling. The analysis of the results indicated a consistent asymmetry of performance throughout the tests, favouring the preferred leg. The asymmetry of performance was maintained at a constant level across the tests for the kicking tasks in both experimental groups. For speed of dribbling, however, the index of lateral asymmetry was reduced from the pre- to the post-test in the NpL group only, which was due to a higher rate of improvement with the nonpreferred leg after the experimental training. These results are indicative of the role played by bilateral practice in modifying lateral asymmetries of performance established as a consequence of previous unilateral training.


Developmental Psychobiology | 2008

Leg preference and interlateral performance asymmetry in soccer player children.

Maria Cândida Tocci Teixeira; Luis Augusto Teixeira

Strength of leg preference and interlateral asymmetry in kinematics of kicking a ball for power were assessed in 6- to 10-year-old right-footed soccer player children. Leg preference was evaluated separately for three task categories: balance stabilization, soccer related mobilization, and general mobilization. The results showed that while both categories of mobilization tasks were featured by a consistent preference for the right leg, in stabilization tasks we observed lower scores and greater interindividual variability of leg preference. No effect of age was detected on leg preference. Analysis of peak foot velocity revealed similar increment of performance of the right and left legs from the ages 6-8 to 10 years. This finding supports the notion of stable magnitude of interlateral asymmetries of performance during motor development.


Perceptual and Motor Skills | 2014

Influence of acute high-intensity aerobic interval exercise bout on selective attention and short-term memory tasks.

Christiano Robles Rodrigues Alves; Victor H. Tessaro; Luis Augusto Teixeira; Karina Murakava; Hamilton Roschel; Bruno Gualano; Monica Yuri Takito

Acute moderate intensity continuous aerobic exercise can improve specific cognitive functions, such as short-term memory and selective attention. Moreover, high-intensity interval training (HIT) has been recently proposed as a time-efficient alternative to traditional cardiorespiratory exercise. However, considering previous speculations that the exercise intensity affects cognition in a U-shaped fashion, it was hypothesized that a HIT session may impair cognitive performance. Therefore, this study assessed the effects of an acute HIT session on selective attention and short-term memory tasks. 22 healthy middle-aged individuals (M age = 53.7 yr.) engaged in both (1) a HIT session, 10 1 min. cycling bouts at the intensity corresponding to 80% of the reserve heart rate interspersed by 1 min. active pauses cycling at 60% of the reserve heart rate and (2) a control session, consisting of an active condition with low-intensity active stretching exercise. Before and after each experimental session, cognitive performance was assessed by the Victoria Version of the Stroop test (a selective attention test) and the Digit Span test (a short-term memory test). Following the HIT session, the time to complete the Stroop “Color word” test was significantly lower when compared with that of the control session. The performances in the other subtasks of the Stroop test as well as in the Digit Span test were not significantly different. A HIT session can improve cognitive function.


Brain and Cognition | 2007

Shift of manual preference in right-handers following unimanual practice

Luis Augusto Teixeira; Maria Cândida Tocci Teixeira

The effect of unimanual practice of the non-preferred hand on manual asymmetry and manual preference for sequential finger movements was evaluated in right-handers before, immediately after, and 30 days following practice. The results demonstrate that unimanual practice induced a persistent shift of manual preference for the experimental task in most participants, but no significant correlation between manual asymmetry and manual preference was detected. These findings are explained by proposing that manual preference is influenced by a task-specific confidence developed from the recent history of differential use of the limbs, in interaction with a generalized confidence on a single hand for performance of motor skills.


Journal of Motor Behavior | 2002

Lateral Asymmetries in the Development of the Overarm Throw

Luis Augusto Teixeira; Elisandra Rafaella Gasparetto

Abstract Lateral asymmetries of manual, pedal, and ocular preferences, and motor asymmetry in the performance of the forceful overarm throw were analyzed in 71 children aged 4 to 10 years old. Performance with each side of the body was assessed on the basis of qualitative analysis, as proposed by M. A. Roberton and L. Halverson (1984) for identification of developmental stages by components of the task. Lateral preference was indicated by the frequency the children used the right or the left side of their body to carry out different manual, pedal, and ocular tasks. The overarm throw movement pattern was developed with both sides of the body hut at different levels. Development of the nondominant side lagged behind that of the dominant side at all ages; a significant asymmetry in performance detected in the 4-year-olds was stable up to the age of 10 years. Indices of asymmetry for lateral preference and performance were found to be specific because no consistent correlations were observed among them throughout the age periods studied. Those results show the multidimensional character of human laterality and imply a property of motor development that prevents asymmetry of performance from increasing because of unilateral practice.


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2012

The interaction of postural and voluntary strategies for stability in Parkinson's disease

Andrea C. de Lima-Pardini; Selma Papegaaij; Rajal G. Cohen; Luis Augusto Teixeira; Beth A. Smith; Fay B. Horak

This study assessed the effects of stability constraints of a voluntary task on postural responses to an external perturbation in subjects with Parkinsons disease (PD) and healthy elderly participants. Eleven PD subjects and twelve control subjects were perturbed with backward surface translations while standing and performing two versions of a voluntary task: holding a tray with a cylinder placed with the flat side down [low constraint (LC)] or with the rolling, round side down [high constraint (HC)]. Participants performed alternating blocks of LC and HC trials. PD participants accomplished the voluntary task as well as control subjects, showing slower tray velocity in the HC condition compared with the LC condition. However, the latency of postural responses was longer in the HC condition only for control subjects. Control subjects presented different patterns of hip-shoulder coordination as a function of task constraint, whereas PD subjects had a relatively invariant pattern. Initiating the experiment with the HC task led to 1) decreased postural stability in PD subjects only and 2) reduced peak hip flexion in control subjects only. These results suggest that PD impairs the capacity to adapt postural responses to constraints imposed by a voluntary task.


Journal of Sports Sciences | 2005

The continuous nature of timing reprogramming in an interceptive task

Luis Augusto Teixeira; Elke dos Santos Lima; Mariana Marília Franzoni

The time course of movement timing reprogramming was examined in a task requiring temporal coincidence of the conclusion of a forehand drive with the arrival of a moving luminous target at the end of an electronic trackway. The moving target departed from one end of the trackway at a constant velocity of 2 m . s−1, and for a part of the trials its velocity was increased to 3 m . s−1. Target velocity was modified at different moments during stimulus displacement, producing times-to-arrival after velocity increment (TAVIs) from 100 to 600 ms. The effect of specific practice on movement reprogramming was also examined. The results showed early adjustments to the action (TAVIs  =  100 – 200 ms) that seemed to be stereotyped, while feedback-based corrections were implemented only at TAVIs of 300 ms or longer. Temporal accuracy was progressively increased as longer TAVIs were provided up to 600 ms. Skill training led to an overall increment of temporal accuracy, but no effect of specific practice was found. The results indicate that timing reprogramming in interceptive actions is a continuous process limited mainly by intrinsic factors: latency to initiate more effective adjustments to the action, and rate-of-movement timing reprogramming.


Gait & Posture | 2010

On the functional integration between postural and supra-postural tasks on the basis of contextual cues and task constraint

Andrea Cristina de Lima; Raymundo Machado de Azevedo Neto; Luis Augusto Teixeira

In order to evaluate the effects of uncertainty about direction of mechanical perturbation and supra-postural task constraint on postural control, young adults had their upright stance perturbed while holding a tray in a horizontal position. Stance was perturbed by moving forward or backward a supporting platform, contrasting situations of certainty versus uncertainty of direction of displacement. Increased constraint on postural stability was imposed by a supra-postural task of equilibrating a cylinder on the tray. Performance was assessed through EMG of anterior leg muscles, angular displacement of the main joints involved in the postural reactions and displacement of the tray. Results showed that both certainty on the direction of perturbation and increased supra-postural task constraint led to decreased angular displacement of the knee and the hip. Furthermore, combination of certainty and high supra-postural task constraint produced shorter latency of muscular activation. Such postural responses were paralleled by decreased displacement of the tray. These results suggest a functional integration between the tasks, with central set priming reactive postural responses from contextual cues and increased stability demand.

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Eloisa Tudella

Federal University of São Carlos

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