Reliability and validity of a medicine ball: Contained accelerometer for measuring upperbody neuromuscular performance

Journal article


Roe, Gregory A. B., Shaw, William, Darrall-Jones, Joshua David, Phibbs, Padraic J., Read, Dale B., Weakley, Jonathon J., Till, Kevin and Jones, Ben. (2018). Reliability and validity of a medicine ball: Contained accelerometer for measuring upperbody neuromuscular performance. Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research. 32(7), pp. 1915 - 1918. https://doi.org/10.1519/JSC.0000000000002470
AuthorsRoe, Gregory A. B., Shaw, William, Darrall-Jones, Joshua David, Phibbs, Padraic J., Read, Dale B., Weakley, Jonathon J., Till, Kevin and Jones, Ben
Abstract

Roe, G, Shaw, W, Darrall-Jones, J, Phibbs, PJ, Read, D, Weakley, JJ, Till, K, and Jones, B. Reliability and validity of a medicine ball-contained accelerometer for measuring upper-body neuromuscular performance. J Strength Cond Res 32(7): 1915-1918, 2018-The aim of the study was to assess the between-day reliability and validity of a medicine ball-contained accelerometer (MBA) for assessing upper-body neuromuscular performance during a throwing task. Ten professional rugby union players partook in the study. Between-day reliability was assessed from the best score attained during 2 sets of 3 throws, on 2 testing occasions separated by 7 days. Validity was assessed against a criterion measure (Optioelectronic system) during 75 throws from a subgroup of 3 participants. The MBA exhibited a small between-day error of 2.2% (90% confidence intervals; 2.0-4.6%) and an almost perfect relationship with a criterion measure (r = 0.91 [90% CIs; 0.87-0.94]). However, the mean bias and standard error were moderate (7.9% [90% CIs; 6.6-9.2%] and 4.9% [90% CIs; 4.2-5.7%], respectively). Practitioners using an MBA to assess neuromuscular performance of the upper body must take into account the overestimation and error associated with such assessment with respect to a criterion measure. However, as the error associated with between-day testing was small and testing is easy to implement in applied practice, an MBA may provide a useful tool for monitoring upper-body neuromuscular performance over time.

Keywordstesting; monitoring; fatigue
Year2018
JournalJournal of Strength and Conditioning Research
Journal citation32 (7), pp. 1915 - 1918
PublisherOvid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer) - National Strength & Conditioning
ISSN1064-8011
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1519/JSC.0000000000002470
Scopus EID2-s2.0-85055609957
Page range1915 - 1918
Research GroupSchool of Behavioural and Health Sciences
Publisher's version
File Access Level
Controlled
Place of publicationUnited States of America
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