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Mapping the Knowledge of Research Trends in Sports Performance Asymmetries from 2015 to 2024: A Bibliometric Study and Analysis of the Most-Cited Papers. [PDF]

open access: yesSports (Basel)
Becerra-Patiño BA   +7 more
europepmc   +1 more source
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Sleep and Sport Performance

Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology, 2023
Summary: Elite athletes and coaches believe sleep is the most important recovery strategy and widely consider it critical to optimal performance. Despite this perceived importance, there are numerous circumstances that can reduce sleep quantity and quality in athletic populations.
Hugh H K, Fullagar   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Sport Performance section

Journal of Sports Sciences, 2004
Those of us who are involved in sport and exercise have a dilemma. On the one hand, we work in areas that for many are hobbies or at least are outside their occupations.
openaire   +2 more sources

“Performing” Sport

International Review of Qualitative Research, 2010
This paper frames, and creates, a fictionalized two-act play based upon two real yet imagined contexts: 1) 1975, apartheid-era South Africa (involving cricket, Yacoob Omar—who was one of South Africa's premier Black cricketers during apartheid, other 1970s-era cricketers, and a fabricated scenario), and 2) a 1995, “post-apartheid” South Africa ...
openaire   +1 more source

Anxiety and Sport Performance

Exercise and Sport Sciences Reviews, 1992
From the findings summarized in this review, it appears that there is little evidence in support of the inverted-U hypothesis. Available research indicates that there is considerable variability in the optimal precompetition anxiety responses among athletes, which does not conform to the inverted-U hypothesis.
openaire   +2 more sources

Nutrition and Sports Performance

Sports Medicine, 1984
During the past 20 years there have been great developments in the scientific understanding of the role of nutrition in health and physical performance. Epidemiological and physiological studies have provided evidence that certain forms of dietary behaviour may be linked with an increased risk of developing disorders such as high blood pressure ...
openaire   +2 more sources

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