keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31766408/what-do-olympic-shooters-think-about-physical-training-factors-and-their-performance
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel Mon-López, Francisco Moreira da Silva, Santiago Calero Morales, Olga López-Torres, Jorge Lorenzo Calvo
BACKGROUND: Many aspects affect precision sports like shooting. Skills such as strength and balance are related to shooting performance and therefore, they should be trained. Thus, planned physical workouts can help to improve Olympic Shooting performance. The main objective of this study was to determine elite shooters' perspective about fitness trainings. METHODS: Eight elite international shooters were interviewed using a semi-structured script validated by an expert shooting committee...
November 21, 2019: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31193395/determinants-for-success-in-climbing-a-systematic-review
#22
REVIEW
Dominik Saul, Gino Steinmetz, Wolfgang Lehmann, Arndt F Schilling
BACKGROUND: The number of athletes engaged in climbing sports has risen. Specific physical and psychological skills are required. The objective of this review was to determine factors for high climbing performance. We evaluated physiological, biomechanical and psychological characteristics that simplify the ascent. We also assessed training and recovery strategies. METHODS: Medline (Pubmed), Cochrane Library and Google scholar up to September 2018. RESULTS: A low skinfold thickness, body fat and large forearm volume were anthropometric traits in successful climbers...
July 2019: Journal of Exercise Science and Fitness
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30442803/swifter-higher-stronger-what-s-on-the-menu
#23
REVIEW
Louise M Burke, John A Hawley
The exploits of elite athletes delight, frustrate, and confound us as they strive to reach their physiological, psychological, and biomechanical limits. We dissect nutritional approaches to optimal performance, showcasing the contribution of modern sports science to gold medals and world titles. Despite an enduring belief in a single, superior "athletic diet," diversity in sports nutrition practices among successful athletes arises from the specificity of the metabolic demands of different sports and the periodization of training and competition goals...
November 16, 2018: Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30174627/drive-in-sports-how-mental-fatigue-affects-endurance-performance
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lieke Schiphof-Godart, Bart Roelands, Florentina J Hettinga
Performance in endurance sports relies on athletes' drive, which is the sum of all factors pushing athletes to exert effort during exercise. Mental fatigue can influence endurance performance by decreasing athletes' drive to exercise. From a psychological point of view, mental fatigue has two separate components: it can affect drive by increasing the perceived effort necessary for a given task ("I cannot do this, I am too exhausted"), or by decreasing the perceived value of the reward that can be obtained ("I do not want to do this, it is not worth it")...
2018: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29934212/the-impact-of-sport-related-stressors-on-immunity-and-illness-risk-in-team-sport-athletes
#25
REVIEW
Lauren C Keaney, Andrew E Kilding, Fabrice Merien, Deborah K Dulson
OBJECTIVES: Elite team-sport athletes are frequently exposed to stressors that have the potential to depress immunity and increase infection risk. Therefore, the purpose of this review is to describe how team-sport stressors impact upon immune responses, along with exploring whether alterations in these markers have the potential to predict upper respiratory tract illness symptoms. DESIGN: Narrative review. METHODS: Salivary secretory immunoglobulin A (SIgA) and T-cell markers have been shown to predict infection risk in individual endurance athletes...
December 2018: Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29420813/sport-psychology-for-the-soldier-athlete-a-paradigm-shift
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vanessa M Meyer
BACKGROUND: Competitive athletes train body and mind in preparation for competition with mental fortitude often providing the "winning edge." Similarly, the current-day warfighter faces significant physical and psychological challenges and must be prepared to respond to life-threatening danger with mental and physical agility. Sport Psychology for the Soldier Athlete recognizes the soldier as an elite athlete and provides training required to perform at the highest caliber. Through this curriculum, mental skills coaching in goal setting, imagery, positive self-talk, and heart rate control is integrated into routine physical fitness training...
July 1, 2018: Military Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25435787/high-training-volumes-are-associated-with-a-low-number-of-self-reported-sick-days-in-elite-endurance-athletes
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sandra Mårtensson, Kristina Nordebo, Christer Malm
It has been proposed that high exercise loads increase the risk of infection, most frequently reported as upper respiratory tract infections, by suppressing the immune system. Most athletes will not train when experiencing sickness due to the fear of health complications. However, high training volumes are incompatible with high rates of non-training days, regardless of the cause. The purpose of this observational study was to examine the relationship between self-reported, exercise-constraining days of sickness (days when the athlete decided not to train due to symptoms of disease, either self-reported or by a physician) and the volumes of exercise training in elite endurance athletes by analyzing data from training logs kept for several years...
December 2014: Journal of Sports Science & Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/25029703/effect-of-whey-protein-hydrolysate-on-performance-and-recovery-of-top-class-orienteering-runners
#28
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Mette Hansen, Jens Bangsbo, Jørgen Jensen, Bo Martin Bibby, Klavs Madsen
This trial aimed to examine the effect of whey protein hydrolysate intake before and after exercise sessions on endurance performance and recovery in elite orienteers during a training camp. Eighteen elite orienteers participated in a randomized controlled intervention trial during a 1-week training camp (13 exercise sessions). Half of the runners (PRO-CHO) ingested a protein drink before (0.3 g kg(-1)) and a protein-carbohydrate drink after (0.3 g protein kg(-1) and 1 g carbohydrate kg(-1)) each exercise session...
April 2015: International Journal of Sport Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24300059/-the-engine-just-started-coughing-limits-of-physical-performance-aging-and-career-continuity-in-elite-endurance-sports
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Noora J Ronkainen, Tatiana V Ryba, Mark S Nesti
This research examines male endurance athletes' experience of aging and/or reaching the perceived limits of physical performance. More specifically, the current study aimed to explore how existential meanings attached to these experiences are connected with athletes' decision-making concerning career continuity and retirement. Life story interviews were conducted with 10 Finnish runners and/or orienteers aged between 25 and 62 and the data was analyzed with an existential-narrative framework. Four major storylines related to aging were identified: The end of an era, putting things in perspective, the attitude has to change and winning was never the only motive...
December 2013: Journal of Aging Studies
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23829157/personality-hardiness-at-different-levels-of-competitive-motorcycling
#30
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Sion Thomas, Colin Reeves, James Agombar, Iain Greenlees
This study assessed the personality construct of hardiness within elite, male, full-time, professional motorcycle racers (n = 32) from the Federation Internationale de Motorcyclisme (F.I.M) Moto G. P Championship (n = 16) and World Endurance Championship (n = 16), as well as club level motorcycling competitors (n = 31). All riders completed Nowack's Cognitive Hardiness Inventory (1990), either before the start of official qualification during race week (elite professional riders), or prior to a club weekend meet (club racers)...
February 2013: Perceptual and Motor Skills
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23591948/attributes-of-top-elite-team-handball-players
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Luís M Massuça, Isabel Fragoso, Júlia Teles
Researchers in the field of excellence in sport performance are becoming increasingly focused on the study of sport-specific characteristics and requirements. In accordance with this, the purposes of this study were (a) to examine the morphologic-, fitness-, handball-specific skills and psychological and "biosocial" differences between top elite and nontop elite team-handball players and (b) to investigate the extent to which they may be used to identify top elite team-handball players. One hundred sixty-seven adult male team-handball players were studied and divided in 2 groups: top elite (n = 41) and nontop elite (n = 126)...
January 2014: Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21934172/are-there-useful-physiological-or-psychological-markers-for-monitoring-overload-training-in-elite-rowers
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tiaki B Smith, Will G Hopkins, Tim E Lowe
There is a need for markers that would help determine when an athlete's training load is either insufficient or excessive. In this study we examined the relationship between changes in performance and changes in physiological and psychological markers during and following a period of overload training in 10 female and 10 male elite rowers. Change in performance during a 4-wk overload was determined with a weekly 30-min time-trial on a rowing ergometer, whereas an incremental test provided change in lactate-threshold power between the beginning of the study and following a 1-wk taper after the overload...
December 2011: International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21812823/indicators-for-high-physical-strain-and-overload-in-elite-football-players
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
S Meister, O Faude, T Ammann, R Schnittker, T Meyer
Laboratory, psychological and performance parameters as possible indicators of physical strain and overload during highly demanding competition phases were evaluated in elite male football players. In two studies with the same objective, periods of high (HE: >270 min during 3 weeks before testing) and low (LE: <270 min) match exposure were compared over the course of an entire season. In study 1 (n=88 players of the first and second German leagues; age: 25.6 ± 4.3 years; body mass index (BMI): 23.2 ± 1...
March 2013: Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20656626/physiological-and-psychological-fatigue-in-extreme-conditions-overtraining-and-elite-athletes
#34
REVIEW
Dianna Purvis, Stephen Gonsalves, Patricia A Deuster
This article will review relevant mechanisms and markers associated with overtraining syndrome (OTS), and discuss signs and symptoms, differential diagnosis, and current assessment tools for fatigue within the context of overtraining. The findings are drawn from original research and review articles referenced by PubMed and ScienceDirect databases. Sources were selected for their contributions to the current knowledge of biological, psychological, and molecular mechanisms. Data were reviewed for relevance to OTS and then evaluated against criteria that included significant OTS outcomes and findings...
May 2010: PM & R: the Journal of Injury, Function, and Rehabilitation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19831102/a-cross-national-analysis-of-mental-toughness-and-hardiness-in-elite-university-rugby-league-teams
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael Sheard
The relation between nationality and selected indicators of psychological performance in rugby league football was examined. Mental toughness was assessed using the alternative Psychological Performance Inventory (PPI-A) and hardiness using the Personal Views Survey III-R (PVS III-R). Participants (N = 49, M age = 21.7 yr., SD = 2.3) were male elite-level university rugby league footballers representing Australia and Great Britain. Participants completed the questionnaires in training camp in Sydney, Australia, one week prior to the commencement of an international tournament there in 2006...
August 2009: Perceptual and Motor Skills
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19479630/impact-of-training-on-changes-in-perceived-stress-and-cytokine-production
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Luana C Main, Brian Dawson, J Robert Grove, Grant J Landers, Carmel Goodman
Data on training of competitive athletes and the inflammatory response, and, more specifically, the utility of psychological inventories to monitor this response in regards to overreaching is limited. The aim of the present study was to investigate the association of the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) and inflammatory markers in elite rowers. Eight rowers (males n = 4; females n = 4) were monitored over an 8-week training period, comprising 12 sessions each week and training an average 3.11 h.d(-1). Training volume was periodized weekly while intensity was maintained throughout the study...
2009: Research in Sports Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18986043/perceptual-cognitive-skills-and-performance-in-orienteering
#37
COMPARATIVE STUDY
José F Guzmán, Ana M Pablos, Carlos Pablos
The goal was analysis of the perceptual-cognitive skills associated with sport performance in orienteering in a sample of 22 elite and 17 nonelite runners. Variables considered were memory, basic orienteering techniques, map reading, symbol knowledge, map-terrain-map identification, and spatial organisation. A computerised questionnaire was developed to measure the variables. The reliability of the test (agreement between experts) was 90%. Findings suggested that competence in performing basic orienteering techniques efficiently was a key variable differentiating between the elite and the nonelite athletes...
August 2008: Perceptual and Motor Skills
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18614951/clinical-significance-of-cardiac-damage-and-changes-in-function-after-exercise
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gregory P Whyte
Acute bouts of ultraendurance exercise may result in the appearance of biomarkers of cardiac cell damage and a transient reduction in left ventricular function. The clinical significance of these changes is not fully understood. There seems to be two competing issues to be resolved. First, could prolonged endurance exercise produce a degree of cardiac stress and/or damage that results, during the short or long term, in deleterious consequences for cardiac health. Second, there is a clear need to educate those responsible for the medical care of endurance athletes about the possibility of a transient reduction in cardiac function and the appearance of cTnT/cTnI after an exercise...
August 2008: Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17465620/the-psychology-of-the-marathoner-of-one-mind-and-many
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
John S Raglin
The unique physiological attributes of marathoners have long been recognised, but until the pioneering research of Morgan and Pollock (1977) little was known about their psychological characteristics. Their work revealed marathoners have significantly better mental health compared with non-athletes, with desirable mental health variables being most pronounced in elite competitors. It was also found that during competition, elite marathoners typically utilise a unique cognitive strategy labelled 'association', whereby they regulate pace based upon bodily sensations including pain and effort...
2007: Sports Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17115522/hormonal-and-psychological-adaptation-in-elite-male-rowers-during-prolonged-training
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
P Purge, J Jürimäe, T Jürimäe
In this study, we examined possible hormonal and psychological changes in elite male rowers during a 24-week preparatory period. Eleven elite male rowers were tested on seven occasions over the 6-month training season. Fasting testosterone, growth hormone, cortisol, and creatine kinase activity, together with perceived recovery-stress state were evaluated after a day of rest. Maximal oxygen consumption (VO2max) was determined before and after the training period. Training was mainly organized as low-intensity prolonged training sessions...
October 2006: Journal of Sports Sciences
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