SSIG is een samenwerkingsverband tussen de
Rijksuniversiteit Groningen (RUG), het Universitair Medisch Centrum Groningen
(UMCG), de Hanzehogeschool Groningen (HG), de Gemeente Groningen (GG) en Lode Holding.
Interested? You can read the whole article here. Menting et al. (2019). Pacing Behavior of Elite Youth Athletes: Analyzing 1500-m Short-Track Speed Skating – International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance, 2019, 14, 222-231.
Interested? You can read the whole article here. Tollár et al. (2019). Two-year agility maintenance training slows the progression of Parkinsonian symptoms – Medicine and Science in sports and exercise.
Interested? You can read the whole article here. Moeijes et al. (2019). – Sports participation and health-related quality of life in children: results of a cross-sectional study – Health and Quality of Life Outcomes.
Interested? You can read the whole article here. Jaspers et al. (2019). – Predicting future perceived wellness in professional soccer: The role of preceding load and wellness – International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance
Interested? You can read the whole article here. Rabello et al. (2019) – Patellar tendon structure responds to load over a 7‐week preseason in elite male volleyball players – Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports.
Read the whole article: Van Vulpen et al. (2017). Den Hartigh & Gernigon (2018). Does power-training improve muscle strength and walking capacity of children with cerebral palsy? Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair, Vol. 31(9), 827–841.
This infographic belongs to the master thesis of Lotte Bransen, the first Football Science Groningen Award winner. Read our report of the event here (NL). Want to read the whole thesis? –> Bransen (2017). Valuing passes in football using ball event data.
Read the whole article: Den Hartigh & Gernigon (2018). Time-out! How psychological momentum builds up and breaks down in table tennis. Journal of Sports Sciences 36(23), 2732-2737.
Read the whole article: Folkerts et al. (2017). Effectiveness and feasibility of eccentric and task-oriented strength training in individuals with stroke. NeuroRehabilitation 40(4), 459-471.