Data underlying the research on the effect of a visual dual task on single-leg countermovement jump in lower-limb injured professional soccer players
doi:10.4121/b3cd64a4-3090-4ded-9827-382e64da23a4.v1
The doi above is for this specific version of this dataset, which is currently the latest. Newer versions may be published in the future.
For a link that will always point to the latest version, please use
doi: 10.4121/b3cd64a4-3090-4ded-9827-382e64da23a4
doi: 10.4121/b3cd64a4-3090-4ded-9827-382e64da23a4
Datacite citation style:
Memain, Geoffrey (2024): Data underlying the research on the effect of a visual dual task on single-leg countermovement jump in lower-limb injured professional soccer players. Version 1. 4TU.ResearchData. dataset. https://doi.org/10.4121/b3cd64a4-3090-4ded-9827-382e64da23a4.v1
Other citation styles (APA, Harvard, MLA, Vancouver, Chicago, IEEE) available at Datacite
Dataset
licence
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
The study examined motor automation and the attentional demands associated with performing a single-leg countermovement jump (SLCMJ) combined with a dual-task in high-level soccer players. The goal was to assess how the dual-task affected neuromotor control and SLCMJ performance. Participants performed single-leg countermovement jumps (SLCMJ) on the injured leg while muscle activation, kinematics, and kinetic data were recorded. Tests were done with and without a dual-task, where players declared aloud the color on a pod 3m away. Three injury groups (chondral, muscle, ACL) and a healthy control group followed the same protocol.
history
- 2024-10-23 first online, published, posted
publisher
4TU.ResearchData
format
.xlsx
DATA
files (2)
- 300,065 bytesMD5:
a9ac27b0c7346e6018256c86791e4047
Database Effect of the dual task on CMJ.xlsx - 19,133 bytesMD5:
5321ad24188733975ba87af2e4547aab
READ ME.docx -
download all files (zip)
319,198 bytes unzipped