Balance control, agility, eye-hand coordination, and sport performance of amateur badminton players: A cross-sectional study

Publication Type:
Journal Article
Citation:
Medicine (United States), 2019, 98 (2)
Issue Date:
2019-01-01
Full metadata record
© 2019 the Author(s). In this study, balance performance, agility, eye-hand coordination, and sports performance were compared between amateur badminton players and active controls. Thirty young adult badminton players and 33 active controls participated in the study. Static single-leg standing balance (with eyes closed) was measured using a force platform, and dynamic balance was measured using the Y Balance Test (lower quarter). Agility was measured using a hexagon agility test, and eye-hand coordination was measured using a computerized finger-pointing task. Sports performance was quantified by the number of times a shuttlecock fell in a designated area following a badminton serve. The badminton players had superior accuracy in badminton serving (P<.001) relative to the active controls. However, no significant between-group differences were noted in all other outcome variables (P>.05). Amateur badminton players had more favorable sports performance, but not balance performance, agility, or eye-hand coordination, than controls.
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