About this Research Topic
In the realm of sports, precise measurement is crucial. Over the past 30 years, the scientific exploration of physical activity and sports has seen continuous growth. Enhancing athlete performance through evidence-based strategies and recommendations has become imperative.
Numerous sports and disciplines leverage empirical evidence to boost performance in competitions, including sports training, where both groups and individuals embrace novel methodologies and intervention proposals. Despite the expansive knowledge surrounding sports, there remains a need for more in-depth research. Established approaches like sports physiology, behavior analysis, performance analysis, sports psychology, innovative methodologies, the latest training proposals, and new statistical techniques must continue to evolve.
Concurrently, certain sports lack a robust scientific literature. This includes children and youth sports, adapted sports (parasports), and women's sports, all of which necessitate more extensive studies to solidify sports science.
The objectives of this research topic are twofold:
Firstly, to further consolidate a science around sports from multiple perspectives, encompassing sports physiology, technical and tactical behavior analysis, game systems, competition and performance analysis, sports psychology, sports rehabilitation, methodology, statistical analysis, coaching, and sports training analysis.
Secondly, to create a space for researchers to continue developing studies in areas that lack substantial scientific literature, such as children and youth sports (with a focus on new training proposals and performance analysis), women's sports (both individual and collective), adapted sports or parasports, any other sporting context or discipline currently lacking evidence, and psychological variables related to training and sports performance.
The Research Topic aims to compile research from experts in these diverse fields. Therefore, we invite researchers to submit the following types of articles: Original research articles, Clinical trials, Data reports, Hypothesis and theory, Study protocols, Systematic reviews, Case studies, and any other research or review directly related to the topic's objectives, supported by the journal.
Keywords: Performance analysis, individual sport, collective sports, adapted sports, parasports, match analysis, high performance, tactics, technique, female sport, women's sport, volume II
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.