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The Effects of a Field-Based Priming Session on Perceptual, Physiological, and Performance Markers in Female Rugby Sevens Players
Billy R.J. Mason ,
Andrew J. McKune ,
Kate L. Pumpa ,
Jocelyn K. Mara ,
Alexander C. Engel ,
Liam Kilduff ,
Nick B. Ball
International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance, Pages: 1 - 9
Swansea University Author: Liam Kilduff
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DOI (Published version): 10.1123/ijspp.2023-0098
Abstract
Purpose: This study aimed to determine the effects of a field-based priming session on perceptual, physiological and performance responses in female rugby sevens athletes. Methods: Thirteen highly trained female rugby sevens players (age: 20.7 ± 2.0 years; height: 169.3 ± 4.8 cm; weight: 68.8 ± 7.9...
Published in: | International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance |
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ISSN: | 1555-0265 1555-0273 |
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Human Kinetics
2023
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa63562 |
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2023-09-04T12:17:35.4305046 v2 63562 2023-05-31 The Effects of a Field-Based Priming Session on Perceptual, Physiological, and Performance Markers in Female Rugby Sevens Players 972ed9a1dda7a0de20581a0f8350be98 0000-0001-9449-2293 Liam Kilduff Liam Kilduff true false 2023-05-31 EAAS Purpose: This study aimed to determine the effects of a field-based priming session on perceptual, physiological and performance responses in female rugby sevens athletes. Methods: Thirteen highly trained female rugby sevens players (age: 20.7 ± 2.0 years; height: 169.3 ± 4.8 cm; weight: 68.8 ± 7.9 kg) completed either a 20-min field-based priming session or control condition. Perceptual, physiological and performance variables were collected at baseline (PRE), and 5 (POST5), 30 (POST30), and 120 minutes (POST120) post intervention. Data were analysed using Bayesian mixed effects models.Results: The priming protocol had a larger increase in mental readiness (Maximum a posteriori [MAP] = 20, 95% high-density intervals [HDI] = -4 – 42, probability of direction [PD] % = 95, % in region of practical equivalence [ROPE] = 9.7), physical readiness (MAP = 20.1, 95% HDI = -4.6 – 42.1, PD% = 93, % in ROPE = 10.6), and testosterone (MAP = 14.9, 95% HDI = 0.5 – 27.7, PD% = 98, % in ROPE = 5.6) than the control POST30. Cognitive performance decreased POST120 in the priming condition for congruent (MAP = 0.02, 95% HDI = -0.06 – 0.00, PD% = 95, % in ROPE = 6.4) and incongruent tasks (MAP = 0.00, 95% HDI = -0.07 – 0.00, PD% = 98, % in ROPE = 3.2) when compared with the control. Conclusions: Perceptual and physiological markers improved POST30 in the priming condition. Findings indicate that perceptual and physiological responses to priming were not coupled with performance improvements. Priming was not accompanied by perceptual, physiological or performance improvements at POST120. Journal Article International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance 1 9 Human Kinetics 1555-0265 1555-0273 physical performance; preconditioning; readiness; women’s rugby 1 1 2023 2023-01-01 10.1123/ijspp.2023-0098 http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/ijspp.2023-0098 COLLEGE NANME Engineering and Applied Sciences School COLLEGE CODE EAAS Swansea University 2023-09-04T12:17:35.4305046 2023-05-31T15:43:26.3774171 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Sport and Exercise Sciences Billy R.J. Mason 0000-0002-4070-3419 1 Andrew J. McKune 0000-0002-5479-1544 2 Kate L. Pumpa 0000-0003-3757-3972 3 Jocelyn K. Mara 0000-0003-2091-2608 4 Alexander C. Engel 0000-0003-3994-1994 5 Liam Kilduff 0000-0001-9449-2293 6 Nick B. Ball 0000-0001-5819-3173 7 63562__27662__c35504aa0bd7418b87b013ae213074e4.pdf 63562.pdf 2023-05-31T15:48:50.0365923 Output 953864 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true true eng |
title |
The Effects of a Field-Based Priming Session on Perceptual, Physiological, and Performance Markers in Female Rugby Sevens Players |
spellingShingle |
The Effects of a Field-Based Priming Session on Perceptual, Physiological, and Performance Markers in Female Rugby Sevens Players Liam Kilduff |
title_short |
The Effects of a Field-Based Priming Session on Perceptual, Physiological, and Performance Markers in Female Rugby Sevens Players |
title_full |
The Effects of a Field-Based Priming Session on Perceptual, Physiological, and Performance Markers in Female Rugby Sevens Players |
title_fullStr |
The Effects of a Field-Based Priming Session on Perceptual, Physiological, and Performance Markers in Female Rugby Sevens Players |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Effects of a Field-Based Priming Session on Perceptual, Physiological, and Performance Markers in Female Rugby Sevens Players |
title_sort |
The Effects of a Field-Based Priming Session on Perceptual, Physiological, and Performance Markers in Female Rugby Sevens Players |
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972ed9a1dda7a0de20581a0f8350be98 |
author_id_fullname_str_mv |
972ed9a1dda7a0de20581a0f8350be98_***_Liam Kilduff |
author |
Liam Kilduff |
author2 |
Billy R.J. Mason Andrew J. McKune Kate L. Pumpa Jocelyn K. Mara Alexander C. Engel Liam Kilduff Nick B. Ball |
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Journal article |
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International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance |
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2023 |
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Swansea University |
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1555-0265 1555-0273 |
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10.1123/ijspp.2023-0098 |
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Human Kinetics |
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Faculty of Science and Engineering |
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Faculty of Science and Engineering |
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School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Sport and Exercise Sciences{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Science and Engineering{{{_:::_}}}School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Sport and Exercise Sciences |
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/ijspp.2023-0098 |
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description |
Purpose: This study aimed to determine the effects of a field-based priming session on perceptual, physiological and performance responses in female rugby sevens athletes. Methods: Thirteen highly trained female rugby sevens players (age: 20.7 ± 2.0 years; height: 169.3 ± 4.8 cm; weight: 68.8 ± 7.9 kg) completed either a 20-min field-based priming session or control condition. Perceptual, physiological and performance variables were collected at baseline (PRE), and 5 (POST5), 30 (POST30), and 120 minutes (POST120) post intervention. Data were analysed using Bayesian mixed effects models.Results: The priming protocol had a larger increase in mental readiness (Maximum a posteriori [MAP] = 20, 95% high-density intervals [HDI] = -4 – 42, probability of direction [PD] % = 95, % in region of practical equivalence [ROPE] = 9.7), physical readiness (MAP = 20.1, 95% HDI = -4.6 – 42.1, PD% = 93, % in ROPE = 10.6), and testosterone (MAP = 14.9, 95% HDI = 0.5 – 27.7, PD% = 98, % in ROPE = 5.6) than the control POST30. Cognitive performance decreased POST120 in the priming condition for congruent (MAP = 0.02, 95% HDI = -0.06 – 0.00, PD% = 95, % in ROPE = 6.4) and incongruent tasks (MAP = 0.00, 95% HDI = -0.07 – 0.00, PD% = 98, % in ROPE = 3.2) when compared with the control. Conclusions: Perceptual and physiological markers improved POST30 in the priming condition. Findings indicate that perceptual and physiological responses to priming were not coupled with performance improvements. Priming was not accompanied by perceptual, physiological or performance improvements at POST120. |
published_date |
2023-01-01T20:22:35Z |
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11.04748 |