The coordination of upper and lower limb movements in shooting basketball from various distance: a pilot study

Using continuous relative phase (CRP) to quantify upper-lower limb coordination in shooting basketball. Six male participants performed free-throws and 3-point shots in a random order to yield 10 swish shots and 10 missed shots at each distance for analysis. The SPM analysis on CRPs revealed that a similar strategy was used to coordinate upper and lower limbs for shooting (p>0.05), with no distinguished coordination pattern for swish shots (p>0.05). The analysis on between-trial variability of coordination revealed that swish shots required more adjustment of proximal coordination, and 3-point shots entailed more adjustment of distal coordination. These findings shed light on a better understanding of limb coordination required before ball release in shooting basketball.
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Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:sport games technical and natural sciences
Tagging:Koordination
Published in:ISBS Proceedings Archive: Vol. 42: Iss. 1
Language:English
Published: 2024
Online Access:https://commons.nmu.edu/isbs/vol42/iss1/36/
Volume:42
Issue:1
Pages:36
Document types:article
Level:advanced