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Effects of Basketball Shoe Midsole Hardness on Lower Extremity Biomechanics and Perception during Drop Jumping from Different Heights
by
Pan, Jing Wen
, Teng, Phillis Soek Po
, Sterzing, Thorsten
, Kong, Pui Wah
, Teo, Crosby
, Alonzo, Rebecca
in
Athletes
/ Biomechanics
/ Data collection
/ Electromyography
/ Force
/ ground reaction force
/ High school basketball
/ Kinematics
/ Motion capture
/ perception
/ Perceptions
/ range of motion
/ Shoes & boots
/ Sports injuries
/ Studies
/ work
2020
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Effects of Basketball Shoe Midsole Hardness on Lower Extremity Biomechanics and Perception during Drop Jumping from Different Heights
by
Pan, Jing Wen
, Teng, Phillis Soek Po
, Sterzing, Thorsten
, Kong, Pui Wah
, Teo, Crosby
, Alonzo, Rebecca
in
Athletes
/ Biomechanics
/ Data collection
/ Electromyography
/ Force
/ ground reaction force
/ High school basketball
/ Kinematics
/ Motion capture
/ perception
/ Perceptions
/ range of motion
/ Shoes & boots
/ Sports injuries
/ Studies
/ work
2020
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Effects of Basketball Shoe Midsole Hardness on Lower Extremity Biomechanics and Perception during Drop Jumping from Different Heights
by
Pan, Jing Wen
, Teng, Phillis Soek Po
, Sterzing, Thorsten
, Kong, Pui Wah
, Teo, Crosby
, Alonzo, Rebecca
in
Athletes
/ Biomechanics
/ Data collection
/ Electromyography
/ Force
/ ground reaction force
/ High school basketball
/ Kinematics
/ Motion capture
/ perception
/ Perceptions
/ range of motion
/ Shoes & boots
/ Sports injuries
/ Studies
/ work
2020
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Effects of Basketball Shoe Midsole Hardness on Lower Extremity Biomechanics and Perception during Drop Jumping from Different Heights
Journal Article
Effects of Basketball Shoe Midsole Hardness on Lower Extremity Biomechanics and Perception during Drop Jumping from Different Heights
2020
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Overview
This study investigated how midsole hardness of basketball footwear affects lower extremity biomechanics and impacts perception in drop vertical jumps. Eighteen male basketball players performed drop vertical jumps from three heights (31 cm, 46 cm, 61 cm) in basketball shoes of different midsole hardness (50, 60 Asker C). Biomechanical variables of the lower extremity and subjective perception were measured. This study found a significant drop height effect on the lower extremity biomechanics (p < 0.05), with greater ground reaction forces, joint kinetics, and prelanding muscle activation levels observed at higher drop heights. Basketball shoes with a softer midsole led to higher forefoot peak force (p = 0.028) amid lower rearfoot peak force (p = 0.046), lower peak flexion moments at the ankle (p = 0.024) and hip joints (p = 0.029), and greater prelanding muscle activation in the rectus femoris (p = 0.042) and tibialis anterior (p = 0.043). It is concluded that changing midsole hardness within a commercially relevant range triggered a different prelanding muscle activation strategy and hence altered the magnitudes of ground reaction forces and joint loadings during landing. Subjectively, participants perceived higher landing impacts with greater drop heights, though the strength of the associations were weak.
Publisher
MDPI AG
Subject
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