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      Validity, Reliability and Sensitivity of Measures of Sporting Performance :

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      Sports Medicine
      Springer Nature

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          Abstract

          <p class="first" id="d1887335e57">Performance testing is one of the most common and important measures used in sports science and physiology. Performance tests allow for a controlled simulation of sports and exercise performance for research or applied science purposes. There are three factors that contribute to a good performance test: (i) validity; (ii) reliability; and (iii) sensitivity. A valid protocol is one that resembles the performance that is being simulated as closely as possible. When investigating race-type events, the two most common protocols are time to exhaustion and time trials. Time trials have greater validity than time to exhaustion because they provide a good physiological simulation of actual performance and correlate with actual performance. Sports such as soccer are more difficult to simulate. While shuttle-running protocols such as the Loughborough Intermittent Shuttle Test may simulate physiology of soccer using time to exhaustion or distance covered, it is not a valid measure of soccer performance. There is a need to include measures of skill in such protocols. Reliability is the variation of a protocol. Research has shown that time-to-exhaustion protocols have a coefficient of variation (CV) of &gt;10%, whereas time trials are more reliable as they have been shown to have a CV of &lt;5%. A sensitive protocol is one that is able to detect small, but important, changes in performance. The difference between finishing first and second in a sporting event is &lt;1%. Therefore, it is important to be able to detect small changes with performance protocols. A quantitative value of sensitivity may be accomplished through the signal : noise ratio, where the signal is the percentage improvement in performance and the noise is the CV. </p>

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Sports Medicine
          Sports Medicine
          Springer Nature
          0112-1642
          2008
          2008
          : 38
          : 4
          : 297-316
          Article
          10.2165/00007256-200838040-00003
          529d8340-a479-46d3-addf-9753bc708fc3
          © 2008
          History

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