233 results match your criteria: "Institute of Sport and Exercise Sciences[Affiliation]"

No sex differences in oxygen uptake or extraction kinetics in the moderate or heavy exercise intensity domains.

J Appl Physiol (1985)

March 2024

Department of Sport, Exercise and Rehabilitation, Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom.

The integrative response to exercise differs between sexes, with oxidative energy contribution purported as a potential mechanism. The present study investigated whether this difference was evident in the kinetics of oxygen uptake (V̇o) and extraction (HHb + Mb) during exercise. Sixteen adults (8 males, 8 females, age: 27 ± 5 yr) completed three experimental visits.

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Background: Although athletes seem to hold uniform views towards non-dopers, their perception of dopers is more nuanced, reflecting positive and negative attributes. Research also indicates that rarely a single factor can explain doping, but a host of reasons that intertwine. A holistic understanding of how values play a role in decisions in anti-doping and the elements that influence athletes' doping vulnerability is timely and warranted.

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Background: Professional rugby union is a high-intensity contact sport with position-specific high training and match volumes across a season that may lead to periods of fatigue if above a typically experienced threshold. This study assesses the influence of match play and/or training on fatigue levels in rugby union players.

Objective: We aimed to perform a systematic review and meta-analysis of measures used to assess fatigue status in male professional rugby union players.

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Concurrent Validity and Reliability of In-Field Vertical Jump Performance Measures on Sand Surfaces.

J Strength Cond Res

April 2024

Department of Neuromotor Behavior and Exercise, Institute of Sport and Exercise Sciences, University of Münster, Münster, Germany; and.

Wirtz, S, Julian, R, Schmale, R, and Eils, E. Concurrent validity and reliability of in-field vertical jump performance measures on sand surfaces. J Strength Cond Res 38(4): 687-693, 2024-Beach sports, such as handball, volleyball, and soccer, involve dynamic actions, primarily jumps.

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Background: In an aging population, it is important to activate older adults in taking care of their own health. Increasing physical activity is one way to avoid or lessen age-related physical and mental impairments. Interest in the use of information and communication technology (ICT) tools to promote physical activity among older adults is growing considerably.

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Predicting object properties based on movement kinematics.

Brain Inform

November 2023

Department of Neuromotor Behavior and Exercise, Institute of Sport and Exercise Sciences, University of Münster, Wilhelm-Schickard-Str. 8, 48149, Münster, Germany.

In order to grasp and transport an object, grip and load forces must be scaled according to the object's properties (such as weight). To select the appropriate grip and load forces, the object weight is estimated based on experience or, in the case of robots, usually by use of image recognition. We propose a new approach that makes a robot's weight estimation less dependent on prior learning and, thereby, allows it to successfully grasp a wider variety of objects.

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Smolarek, T, Haff, GG, Poon, WCK, Nagatani, T, Barley, OR, and Guppy, SN. Dynamic and isometric force-time curve characteristics influencing change of direction performance of state-level netball players. J Strength Cond Res 37(12): 2397-2404, 2023-Although multiple lower-body strength capacities are required to change direction rapidly, there is limited knowledge about the relative importance of these factors.

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Background: Interdependencies of health, fitness, cognition, and emotion can promote or inhibit mobility. This study aimed to analyse pathways and interactions between individual subjective and objective physical performance, cognition, and emotions with activities of daily living (ADLs) as mobility indicators in multimorbid nursing home residents.

Methods: The study included n = 448 (77.

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Article Synopsis
  • Home advantage (HA) in volleyball is significant, showing a winning probability of 57.01% for men and 55.39% for women when playing at home, indicating a strong influence of location on match outcomes.
  • Research focused on small female sample sizes has overlooked the effect of spectators, prompting this study which analyzed 25 seasons of professional German volleyball, totaling 6,833 matches for both genders.
  • The presence of more spectators had a minimal impact on winning chances, and unlike other sports, HA has not shown significant development over the years.
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Research in cognitive fatigue has identified the negative impact that cognitive exertion can have on subsequent task performance. An underexamined question is whether there are different types of fatigue, particularly: active fatigue, similar to cognitive fatigue, and passive fatigue, similar to boredom. This online study examined whether active and passive fatigue can be elicited and differentiated using computerized cognitive tasks.

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Energy constraint and compensation: Insights from endurance athletes.

Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol

November 2023

Global Health Institute, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA. Electronic address: https://twitter.com/HermanPontzer.

The Constrained Model of Total Energy Expenditure predicts that increased physical activity may not influence total energy expenditure, but instead, induces compensatory energetic savings in other processes. Much remains unknown, however, about concepts of energy expenditure, constraint and compensation in different populations, and it is unclear whether this model applies to endurance athletes, who expend very large amounts of energy during training and competition. Furthermore, it is well-established that some endurance athletes consciously or unconsciously fail to meet their energy requirements via adequate food intake, thus exacerbating the extent of energetic stress that they experience.

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Elite darts performance and the social influence of real crowds and simulated crowd noise.

Sci Rep

July 2023

Department of Sport and Exercise Psychology, Institute of Sport and Exercise Sciences, University of Muenster, Horstmarer Landweg 62b, 48149, Muenster, Germany.

While the effect of missing audiences has been studied numerously in team sports with diverse effects, studies on individual performances are rare. The current investigation analyzes performances of professional dart players in (a) the absence of spectators, (b) the presence of real crowds, and (c) artificial crowd noise (simulated crowds) substituting live spectators during the COVID-19 pandemic. Empirical evidence suggests that performances in coordination-based accuracy tasks are negatively impacted by the presence of others.

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Background: Alzheimer disease (AD) and Parkinson disease (PD) are the 2 most common neurodegenerative diseases affecting millions of people worldwide. The Personalized Integrated Care Promoting Quality of Life for Older People (PC4L) project proposes an integrated, scalable, and interactive care ecosystem that can be easily adapted to the needs of several neurodegenerative and chronic diseases, care institutions, and end user requirements.

Objective: The study protocol developed within the framework of the PC4L project aims to iteratively test the integrated platform and its modules, and focuses primarily on assessing the impact of the proposed solution (ie, the PC4L platform) on patients' quality of life, as well as its usability and feasibility on a large-scale sample size in 3 different scenarios (home, neurorehabilitation, and day care centers).

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Improving menstrual health literacy in sport.

J Sci Med Sport

July 2023

Discipline of Sport and Exercise Science, Department of Sport, Exercise, and Nutrition Science, La Trobe University, Australia. Electronic address:

Menstrual health represents a state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being in relation to a woman's menstrual cycle. From a health literacy perspective, knowledge acquisition and expertise are dependent upon the degree to which an individual can find, access, understand, critically analyse, and apply health information. Therefore, menstrual health literacy can be used to describe the state of knowledge acquisition and application specific to menstrual health-related issues.

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Sex-dependent performance differences in curvilinear aiming arm movements in octogenarians.

Sci Rep

June 2023

Department of Neuromotor Behavior and Exercise, Institute of Sport and Exercise Sciences, University of Muenster, Wilhelm-Schickard-Str. 8, 48149, Münster, Germany.

In an aging society, it is necessary to detect the cognitive decline of individuals at an early stage using simple measurement methods. This makes early health care possible for those affected. The aim of the study was to develop a classifier for cognitive state in older adults with and without mild cognitive impairment (MCI) based on kinematic parameters of linear and curvilinear aiming arm movements.

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A systematic review of handover actions in human dyads.

Front Psychol

May 2023

Department of Neuromotor Behavior and Exercise, Institute of Sport and Exercise Sciences, University of Münster, Münster, Germany.

Introduction: Handover actions are joint actions in which an object is passed from one actor to another. In order to carry out a smooth handover action, precise coordination of both actors' movements is of critical importance. This requires the synchronization of both the kinematics of the reaching movement and the grip forces of the two actors during the interaction.

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Bimanual coupling is associated with left frontocentral network activity in a task-specific way.

Eur J Neurosci

July 2023

Department of Neuromotor Behavior and Exercise, Institute of Sport and Exercise Sciences, University of Münster, Münster, Germany.

When performing bimanual tasks, hands are typically not controlled individually but rather as a coupled system to achieve high spatiotemporal coordination. On a brain level, intrahemispheric and interhemispheric networks that control the left and right hand are necessary to exchange information between hemispheres and to couple movements. Behaviourally, coupling is, however, highly task-specific requiring, for example, to maintain a specific relative phase in cyclic tasks (e.

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The aim of this study was to extend previous findings on selective attention over a lifetime using machine learning procedures. By decoding group membership and stimulus type, we aimed to study differences in the neural representation of inhibitory control across age groups at a single-trial level. We re-analyzed data from 211 subjects from six age groups between 8 and 83 years of age.

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Inefficient frontal and parietal brain activation during dual-task walking in a virtual environment in older adults.

Neuroimage

June 2023

Institute of Sport and Exercise Sciences, Neuromotor Behavior and Exercise, University of Munster, Wilhelm-Schickard-Straße 8, Munster 48149, Federal Republic of Germany; Institute of Human Movement Science and Health, Chemnitz University of Technology, Reichenhainer Straße 29A, Chemnitz 09126, Federal Republic of Germany. Electronic address:

Walking while performing an additional cognitive task (dual-task walking; DT walking) is a common yet highly demanding behavior in daily life. Previous neuroimaging studies have shown that performance declines from single-task (ST) to DT conditions are accompanied by increased prefrontal cortex (PFC) activity. This increment is particularly pronounced in older adults and has been explained either by compensation, dedifferentiation, or inefficient task processing in fronto-parietal circuits.

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Background: Over the last decade use of raw acceleration metrics to assess physical activity has increased. Metrics such as Euclidean Norm Minus One (ENMO), and Mean Amplitude Deviation (MAD) can be used to generate metrics which describe physical activity volume (average acceleration), intensity distribution (intensity gradient), and intensity of the most active periods (MX metrics) of the day. Presently, relatively little comparative data for these metrics exists in youth.

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Preserving functional health and quality-of-life in old age is a major goal and global challenge in public health. The high rate of sedentary behavior that is characteristic of the older adult population exacerbates impairments of physiological and structural systems that are typically seen in the aging process. Achieving an understanding of the profound influence of physical activity on all aspects of health in old age is the driving force behind the emergence of "physical activity in old age" as a growing area of research.

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Background: Long-term adherence to exercise is often poor for people with coronary heart disease (CHD) who have completed supervised, centre-based cardiac rehabilitation. The aim of this study is to assess the feasibility of a remotely prescribed, delivered and monitored cardiac rehabilitation intervention using a wearable device to support long-term adherence to exercise and physical activity during maintenance of cardiac rehabilitation.

Methods: After completing cardiac rehabilitation, 30 participants with CHD, will be randomised (1:1) to an intervention ( = 15) or a usual care group ( = 15) in a 12-month feasibility randomised controlled trial (RCT).

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Although dynamic resistance training (DRT) and isometric handgrip training (IHT) may decrease blood pressure (BP) in hypertensives, the effects of these types of training have not been directly compared, and a possible additive effect of combining IHT to DRT (combined resistance training-CRT), has not been investigated. Thus, this study compared the effects of DRT, IHT and CRT on BP, systemic hemodynamics, vascular function, and cardiovascular autonomic modulation. Sixty-two middle-aged men with treated hypertension were randomly allocated among four groups: DRT (8 exercises, 50% of 1RM, 3 sets until moderate fatigue), IHT (30% of MVC, 4 sets of 2 min), CRT (DRT + IHT) and control (CON - stretching).

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Introduction: The ability to perform optimally under pressure is critical across many occupations, including the military, first responders, and competitive sport. Despite recognition that such performance depends on a range of cognitive factors, how common these factors are across performance domains remains unclear. The current study sought to integrate existing knowledge in the performance field in the form of a transdisciplinary expert consensus on the cognitive mechanisms that underlie performance under pressure.

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The association of executive functions and physical fitness with cognitive-motor multitasking in a street crossing scenario.

Sci Rep

January 2023

Department of Neuromotor Behavior and Exercise, Institute of Sport and Exercise Sciences, University of Münster, Wilhelm-Schickard-Straße 8, 48149, Muenster, Germany.

Age-related decline in cognitive-motor multitasking performance has been attributed to declines in executive functions and physical fitness (motor coordinative fitness and cardiovascular fitness). It has been suggested that those cognitive and physical resources strongly depend on lifestyle factors such as long-term regular physical activity and cognitive engagement. Although research suggests that there is covariation between components of executive functions and physical fitness, the interdependence between these components for cognitive-motor multitasking performance is not yet clear.

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