Ritchie, D, Keogh, J. W. L., Reaburn, P & Bartlett, J. D. (2020). Utilising one minute and four minute recovery when employing the resistance training contrast method does not negatively affect subsequent jump performance in the presence of concurrent training. PeerJ, 8 , e10031. Zugriff am 04.11.2020 unter https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.10031
APA (7th ed.) CitationRitchie, D., Keogh, J. W. L., Reaburn, P., & Bartlett, J. D. (2020). Utilising one minute and four minute recovery when employing the resistance training contrast method does not negatively affect subsequent jump performance in the presence of concurrent training. PeerJ, 8, e10031.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationRitchie, D., J. W. L. Keogh, P. Reaburn, and J. D. Bartlett. "Utilising One Minute and Four Minute Recovery When Employing the Resistance Training Contrast Method Does Not Negatively Affect Subsequent Jump Performance in the Presence of Concurrent Training." PeerJ 8 (2020): e10031.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationRitchie, D., et al. "Utilising One Minute and Four Minute Recovery When Employing the Resistance Training Contrast Method Does Not Negatively Affect Subsequent Jump Performance in the Presence of Concurrent Training." PeerJ, 8, 2020, p. e10031.