Lee, C.-L, Cheng, C.-F, Lee, C.-J, Kuo, Y.-H & Chang, W.-D. (2014). Co-ingestion of caffeine and carbohydrate after meal does not improve performance at high-intensity intermittent sprints with short recovery times. European Journal of Applied Physiology, 114 (7), 1533-1543. Zugriff am 07.08.2014 unter http://doi.org/10.1007/s00421-014-2888-8
APA-Zitierstil (7. Ausg.)Lee, C., Cheng, C., Lee, C., Kuo, Y., & Chang, W. (2014). Co-ingestion of caffeine and carbohydrate after meal does not improve performance at high-intensity intermittent sprints with short recovery times. European Journal of Applied Physiology, 114(7), 1533-1543.
Chicago-Zitierstil (17. Ausg.)Lee, C.-L, C.-F Cheng, C.-J Lee, Y.-H Kuo, und W.-D Chang. "Co-ingestion of Caffeine and Carbohydrate After Meal Does Not Improve Performance at High-intensity Intermittent Sprints with Short Recovery Times." European Journal of Applied Physiology 114, no. 7 (2014): 1533-1543.
MLA-Zitierstil (9. Ausg.)Lee, C.-L, et al. "Co-ingestion of Caffeine and Carbohydrate After Meal Does Not Improve Performance at High-intensity Intermittent Sprints with Short Recovery Times." European Journal of Applied Physiology, vol. 114, no. 7, 2014, pp. 1533-1543.