| Literature DB >> 27460647 |
Matthew Chiwaridzo1,2, Gillian D Ferguson3, Bouwien C M Smits-Engelsman3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Scientific focus on rugby has increased over the recent years, providing evidence of the physical or physiological characteristics and game-specific skills needed in the sport. Identification of tests commonly used to measure these characteristics is important for the development of test batteries, which in turn may be used for talent identification and injury prevention programmes. Although there are a number of tests available in the literature to measure physical or physiological variables and game-specific skills, there is limited information available on the psychometric properties of the tests. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to systematically review the literature for tests commonly used in rugby to measure physical or physiological characteristics and rugby-specific skills, documenting evidence of reliability and validity of the identified tests. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Game-specific skills; Physical; Physiological characteristics; Psychometric properties; Rugby; Systematic review protocol
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27460647 PMCID: PMC4962394 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-016-0298-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
A summary of selected physiological qualities and game-specific skills needed in rugby and the corresponding test(s)
| Construct | Test(s) |
|---|---|
| 1. Physical/motor or physiological qualities | |
| a. Muscular strength and power | |
| • Upper body muscular strength | 3 repetition maximum bench press [ |
| • Upper body strength endurance | Bench press with repetitions [ |
| • Lower body explosive power | Vertical jump test [ |
| • Lower body muscular strength | 3 repetition maximum full-body squat [ |
| • Abdominal strength | Sit-up test [ |
| b. Speed/acceleration | 10- and 30-m running test [ |
| c. Agility | Illinois test [ |
| • Reactive agility | Reactive agility test [ |
| d. Flexibility | Sit and reach test [ |
| e. Aerobic capacity | Yo-Yo intermittent recovery test [ |
| • Speed endurance | Repetitive sprint test [ |
| 2. Rugby-specific skills | |
| a. Ground skills ability | Pick up and place test [ |
| b. Passing | 4-m passing for accuracy test [ |
| c. Kicking | Kicking ability test [ |
| d. Catching | Catching ability test while moving [ |
| e. Tackling | One-on-one tackling drill in a 10-m grid proficiency assessed using standardised technical criteria [ |
| f. Draw and pass | Single- and dual-task draw and pass assessment test [ |
| g. Pattern recall and prediction | Pattern recall and prediction test [ |
Quality of the statistical outcomes to determine psychometric properties [57, 62]
| Measurement property | Definition | (Rating) quality criteriaa,b |
|---|---|---|
| Reliability | ||
| Internal consistency | The extent to which items in a (sub)scale are intercorrelated, thus measuring the same construct | (+) Factor analyses performed on adequate sample size (7 * # items and >100) AND Cronbach’s alpha(s) calculated per dimension AND Cronbach’s alpha(s) between 0.70 and 0.95 |
| Reproducibility | ||
| Agreement | The extent to which the scores on repeated measures are close to each other (absolute measurement error) | (+) MIC < SDC OR MIC outside the LOA OR convincing arguments that agreement is acceptable |
| Reliability | The extent to which patients can be distinguished from each other, despite measurement errors (relative measurement error) | (+) ICC > 0.70 OR |
| Validity | ||
| Content validity | The extent to which the domain of interest is comprehensively sampled by the items in the questionnaire | (+) A clear description is provided of the measurement aim, the target population, the concepts that are being measured, and the item selection AND target population and (investigators OR experts) were involved in the item selection |
| Construct validity | The extent to which scores on a particular questionnaire relate to other measures in a manner that is consistent with theoretically derived hypotheses concerning the concepts that are being measured | (+) Specific hypotheses were formulated AND at least 75 % of the results are in accordance with these hypotheses |
| Criterion validity (predictive or concurrent | The extent to which scores on a particular questionnaire relate to a gold standard | (+) Correlation with standard ≥0.70 OR no statistically significant differences between the two tests found OR sensitivity and specificity ≥0.70 OR convincing arguments that gold standard is ‘gold’ AND correlation with gold standard >0.70c
|
| Responsiveness | The ability of a questionnaire to detect clinically important changes over time | (+) SDC or SDC < MIC OR MIC outside the LOA OR RR O 1.96 OR AUC > 0.70 |
| Floor and ceiling effects | The number of respondents who achieved the lowest or highest possible score | (+) ≤15 % of the respondents achieved the highest or lowest possible score |
| Interpretability | The degree to which one can assign qualitative meaning to quantitative scores | (+) Mean and SD scores presented of at least 4 relevant subgroups of patients and MIC defined |
MIC minimal important change, SDC smallest detectable change, LOA limits of agreement, ICC intraclass correlation, SD standard deviation
a(+) positive rating; (?) indeterminate rating; (−) negative rating; (0) no information available
bDoubtful design or method = lack of a clear description of the design or methods of the study, sample size smaller than 50 subjects (should be at least 50 in every (subgroup) analysis), or any important methodological weakness in the design or execution of the study
cAdopted from van Bloemendaal et al. [26]