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Three months of slackline training elicit only task-specific improvements in balance performance
by
Gruber, Markus
, Kramer, Andreas
, Giboin, Louis-Solal
in
Accidental falls
/ Accidental Falls - prevention & control
/ Adult
/ Athletes
/ Balance
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Exercise
/ Falls
/ Female
/ Group dynamics
/ Human performance
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Older people
/ People and Places
/ Physical Conditioning, Human - methods
/ Physical Sciences
/ Postural Balance
/ Posture
/ Prevention
/ Rehabilitation
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Short term
/ Slacklining
/ Social Sciences
/ Systematic review
/ Training
/ Warm up (exercise)
/ Young Adult
2018
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Three months of slackline training elicit only task-specific improvements in balance performance
by
Gruber, Markus
, Kramer, Andreas
, Giboin, Louis-Solal
in
Accidental falls
/ Accidental Falls - prevention & control
/ Adult
/ Athletes
/ Balance
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Exercise
/ Falls
/ Female
/ Group dynamics
/ Human performance
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Older people
/ People and Places
/ Physical Conditioning, Human - methods
/ Physical Sciences
/ Postural Balance
/ Posture
/ Prevention
/ Rehabilitation
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Short term
/ Slacklining
/ Social Sciences
/ Systematic review
/ Training
/ Warm up (exercise)
/ Young Adult
2018
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Three months of slackline training elicit only task-specific improvements in balance performance
by
Gruber, Markus
, Kramer, Andreas
, Giboin, Louis-Solal
in
Accidental falls
/ Accidental Falls - prevention & control
/ Adult
/ Athletes
/ Balance
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Exercise
/ Falls
/ Female
/ Group dynamics
/ Human performance
/ Humans
/ Male
/ Medicine and Health Sciences
/ Older people
/ People and Places
/ Physical Conditioning, Human - methods
/ Physical Sciences
/ Postural Balance
/ Posture
/ Prevention
/ Rehabilitation
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Short term
/ Slacklining
/ Social Sciences
/ Systematic review
/ Training
/ Warm up (exercise)
/ Young Adult
2018
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Three months of slackline training elicit only task-specific improvements in balance performance
Journal Article
Three months of slackline training elicit only task-specific improvements in balance performance
2018
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Overview
Slackline training is a challenging and motivating type of balance training, with potential usefulness for fall prevention and balance rehabilitation. However, short-term slackline training seems to elicit mostly task-specific performance improvements, reducing its potential for general fall prevention programs. It was tested whether a longer duration slackline training (three months, 2 sessions per week) would induce a transfer to untrained tasks. Balance performance was tested pre and post slackline training on the slackline used during the training, on a slackline with different slack, and in 5 different non-trained static and dynamic balance tasks (N training = 12, N control = 14). After the training, the training group increased their performance more than the control group in both of the slackline tasks, i.e. walking on the slackline (time × group interaction with p < 0.001 for both tasks). However, no differences between groups were found for the 5 non-trained balance tasks, only a main effect of time for four of them. The long-term slackline training elicited large task-specific performance improvements but no transfer to other non-trained balance tasks. The extensive slackline training that clearly enhanced slackline performance did not improve the capability to keep balance in other tasks and thus cannot be recommended as a general fall prevention program. The significant test-retest effect seen in most of the tested tasks emphasizes the need of a control group to adequately interpret changes in performance following balance training.
Publisher
Public Library of Science,Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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