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Snyder, Natalie; Cinelli, Michael – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2020
Background: Balance control is an essential element of locomotion that enhances biomotor abilities and physical performance. Individuals with extensive soccer experience display superior static single leg balance control compared to athletes of other sports as well as non-athletes. However, during a match, players often encounter greater…
Descriptors: Psychomotor Skills, Motion, Athletes, Team Sports
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Kovacikova, Zuzana; Zemková, Erika – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2021
Purpose: Simulated competition as a training tool has a relevant role in enhancement of exercise intensity, motivation and physical enjoyment. Including a competitive component into the agility training could represent another way to improve agility performance significantly more. The aim of this study was to assess the effect of agility training…
Descriptors: Competition, Exercise, Performance Factors, Training Methods
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Kozakai, Rumi; Nishita, Yukiko; Otsuka, Rei; Ando, Fujiko; Shimokata, Hiroshi – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2020
Physical fitness is one of the key factors in healthy aging. Although physical fitness is widely recognized to decline with age, age-related decreases in the individual dimensions of physical fitness in later life are less clear. Purpose: The purpose of the present study was to describe the age-related changes in six fitness components covering a…
Descriptors: Physical Fitness, Aging (Individuals), Older Adults, Adults
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Ludyga, Sebastian; Gerber, Markus; Brand, Serge; Pühse, Uwe; Colledge, Flora – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2018
Purpose: Acute benefits of aerobic exercise on executive functioning have been reported frequently under laboratory conditions. However, to date, a beneficial effect on long-term memory has been less well supported and no data are available regarding nonlaboratory conditions in young adults. The aim of the current study was to investigate acute…
Descriptors: Exercise, Executive Function, Cognitive Processes, Long Term Memory
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Gutierrez-Davila, Marcos; Rojas, F. Javier; Antonio, Raquel; Navarro, Enrique – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2013
Purpose: The objective was to determine the way in which the level of uncertainty produced during the execution of a lunge attack with target change (two or four possible responses) affects reaction-response time parameters and kinematic factors involved in the technical coordination of the attack. Method: Seventeen fencers from the Spanish…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Athletics, Reaction Time, Athletes
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Akizuki, Kazunori; Ohashi, Yukari – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2014
Purpose: The influence of attention on postural control and the relationship between attention and falling has been reported in previous studies. Although a dual-task procedure is commonly used to measure attentional demand, such procedures are affected by allocation policy, which is a mental strategy to divide attention between simultaneous…
Descriptors: Attention, Metabolism, Physiology, Measures (Individuals)
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Harveson, Andrew T.; Hannon, James C.; Brusseau, Timothy A.; Podlog, Leslie; Papadopoulos, Charilaos; Durrant, Lynne H.; Hall, Morgan S.; Kang, Kyoung-doo – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2016
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine differences in cognition between acute bouts of resistance exercise, aerobic exercise, and a nonexercise control in an untrained youth sample. Method: Ninety-four participants performed 30 min of aerobic exercise, resistance exercise, or nonexercise separated by 7 days each in a randomized…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, High School Students, Exercise, Control Groups
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Horn, Robert R.; Okumura, Michelle S.; Alexander, Melissa G. F.; Gardin, Fredrick A.; Sylvester, Curtis T. – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2012
We tested the hypothesis that quiet eye, the final fixation before the initiation of a movement in aiming tasks, is used to scale the movement's parameters. Two groups of 12 participants (N = 24) threw darts to targets in the horizontal and vertical axes under conditions of higher (random) or lower (blocked) target variability. Supporting our…
Descriptors: Human Body, Eye Movements, Prediction, Attention
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Klapp, Stuart T. – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2010
The effect of response complexity on simple RT, first reported by Henry and Rogers (H&R), is a robust phenomenon for complexity measured by the number of chunks in a multiple-chunk response. However, there are problems with the memory drum theory H&R used to account for this result, and no fully satisfactory alternative explanation has been…
Descriptors: Memory, Reaction Time, Stimuli, Intervals
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Hepler, Teri J.; Feltz, Deborah L. – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2012
The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between decision-making self-efficacy and decision-making performance in sport. Undergraduate students (N = 78) performed 10 trials of a decision-making task in baseball. Self-efficacy was measured before performing each trial. Decision-making performance was assessed by decision speed and…
Descriptors: Self Efficacy, Team Sports, Path Analysis, Undergraduate Students
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Price, Jayme; Gill, Diane L.; Etnier, Jennifer; Kornatz, Kurt – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2009
In this study, the dual-task paradigm was used to determine peak attentional demand during the free-throw process. Thirty participants completed 40 free-throw trials. The free throw was the primary task, but participants also verbally responded to a tone administered at one of four probe positions (PP). Repeated measures analysis of variance…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Statistical Analysis, Comparative Analysis, Team Sports
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Chang, Yu-Kai; Etnier, Jennifer L.; Barella, Lisa A. – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2009
Although a generally positive effect of acute exercise on cognitive performance has been demonstrated, the specific nature of the relationship between exercise-induced arousal and cognitive performance remains unclear. This study was designed to identify the relationship between exercise-induced arousal and cognitive performance for the central…
Descriptors: Metabolism, Reaction Time, Trend Analysis, Cognitive Processes
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Berry, Tanya; Spence, John C. – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2009
We examined the automatic activation of "sedentary" and "exerciser" stereotypes using a social prime Stroop task. Results showed significantly slower response times between the exercise words and the exercise control words and between the sedentary words and the exercise control words when preceded by an attractive exerciser prime. Words preceded…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Reaction Time, Task Analysis, Feedback (Response)
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Fairbrother, Jeffrey T.; Brueckner, Sebastian – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2008
To understand how task switching affects human performance, there is a need to investigate how it influences the performance of tasks other than those involving bivalent stimulus categorization. The purpose of this study, therefore, was to investigate the effects of task switching on anticipation timing performance, which typically requires…
Descriptors: Performance, Persistence, Perceptual Motor Coordination, Error Patterns
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Fischman, Mark G.; Christina, Robert W.; Anson, J. Greg – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2008
Franklin Henry's "memory drum" theory of neuromotor reaction (Henry & Rogers, 1960) was one of the most influential studies of the response programming stage of information processing. The paper is the most-cited study ever published in the "Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport." However, few people know there is a noteworthy error in the…
Descriptors: Theories, Motor Reactions, Memory, Reaction Time
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