Efficiency in Kinesiology: Innovative Approaches in Enhancing Motor Skills for Athletic Performance 2.0
A special issue of Journal of Functional Morphology and Kinesiology (ISSN 2411-5142). This special issue belongs to the section "Kinesiology and Biomechanics".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (29 April 2024) | Viewed by 38681
Special Issue Editor
Interests: motor control; motor timing; cognitive-motor mechanisms; adaptive control; kinematics; excellent performance; neurorehabilitation
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
On behalf of Journal of Functional Morphology and Kinesiology, I am announcing a Special Issue 2.0 about the implementation of innovative applied research to improve motor skills for reaching superior sporting performances.
Investigations from the last several decades have provided enough evidence for the use of certain means as the training foundation for sharpening athletic performance, both from a biomotor and from a technical standpoint.
However, as the field of sports science continues to grow, new methodologies, technologies, and applications for evaluating, improving, or even predicting motor performance draw the attention of the academic realm, infield operators, and general audiences. Nevertheless, sometimes these new means gain wide popularity without apt scientific support, and sometimes the opposite is true—that is, cutting-edge approaches which are well-validated in the lab fail to transfer within the sporting environments.
Seeing the unceasingly evolving nature of sports science as well as the continuous demand for ever-better competitive performance, the development of novel scientific approaches to improve athletes’ motor skills and performances is desired, and their promulgation is of utmost importance for trainers and scientists. Thus, further research is required to grant a deeper understanding of the advantages and limitations in using particular means when aiming to evaluate, predict, and model sporting performance in both amateur and professional/elite athletes.
In this Special Issue, we are looking for original investigations and reviews which introduce novel approaches to defining how leveraging either extrinsic (socio-economic, geographic, early sporting specialization, etc.) or intrinsic factors (training periodization, training methodology, equipment, cross-training, recovery management, etc.) may help to upgrade athletes’ motor skills to obtain their best athletic performance. I would like to thank Mr. Vincenzo Sorgente as the assistant editor for the Special Issue.
Dr. Diego Minciacchi
Guest Editor
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- kinesiology
- sport science
- sport performance
- biomechanics
- training periodization
- training prescription
- exercise physiology
- athletic performance
- motor performance
- motor skills
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