| Literature DB >> 34925173 |
Fynn Bergmann1, Rob Gray2, Svenja Wachsmuth1, Oliver Höner1.
Abstract
Facilitating players' skill acquisition is a major challenge within sport coaches' work which should be supported by evidence-based recommendations outlining the most effective practice and coaching methods. This systematic review aimed at accumulating empirical knowledge on the influence of practice design and coaching behavior on perceptual-motor and perceptual-cognitive skill acquisition in soccer. A systematic search was carried out according to the PRISMA guidelines across the databases SPORTDiscus, PsycInfo, MEDLINE, and Web of Science to identify soccer-specific intervention studies conducted in applied experimental settings (search date: 22nd November 2020). The systematic search yielded 8,295 distinct hits which underwent an independent screening process. Finally, 34 eligible articles, comprising of 35 individual studies, were identified and reviewed regarding their theoretical frameworks, methodological approaches and quality, as well as the interventions' effectiveness. These studies were classified into the following two groups: Eighteen studies investigated the theory-driven instructional approaches Differential Learning, Teaching Games for Understanding, and Non-linear Pedagogy. Another seventeen studies, most of them not grounded within a theoretical framework, examined specific aspects of practice task design or coaches' instructions. The Downs and Black checklist and the Template for Intervention Description and Replication were applied to assess the quality in reporting, risk of bias, and the quality of interventions' description. Based on these assessments, the included research was of moderate quality, however, with large differences across individual studies. The quantitative synthesis of results revealed empirical support for the effectiveness of coaching methodologies aiming at encouraging players' self-exploration within representative scenarios to promote technical and tactical skills. Nevertheless, "traditional" repetition-based approaches also achieved improvements with respect to players' technical outcomes, yet, their impact on match-play performance remains widely unexplored. In the light of the large methodological heterogeneity of the included studies (e.g., outcomes or control groups' practice activities), the presented results need to be interpreted by taking the respective intervention characteristics into account. Overall, the current evidence needs to be extended by theory-driven, high-quality studies within controlled experimental designs to allow more consolidated and evidence-based recommendations for coaches' work.Entities:
Keywords: dynamical systems; ecological dynamics; football (soccer); information-processing; talent development
Year: 2021 PMID: 34925173 PMCID: PMC8675907 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.772201
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Specification of inclusion criteria regarding the components participants, interventions, comparators, outcomes, and study designs (PICOS).
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| P | • Healthy and injury-free soccer players (i.e., with previous soccer experience) of all age groups and sexes. |
| I | • Soccer-specific interventions conducted in applied (i.e., pitch-based) settings (cf. Spittle, |
| C | • Studies without CG were included for review but only analyzed regarding theoretical frameworks as well as methodological characteristics and quality (i.e., perspectives I and II). In terms of the interventions' effectiveness (i.e., perspective III), only controlled designs including non-active and/or active control groups were considered. |
| O | • Soccer-specific perceptual-motor and/or perceptual-cognitive skills. |
| S | • Any type of quantitative (i.e., quasi-experimental and experimental) intervention study investigating the effectiveness of practice and coaching methods with regard to the acquisition or learning of the aforementioned soccer-specific skills. |
CG, control group.
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart for the documentation of the systematic search process. Notes: The 17 articles on theory-driven instructional approaches include 18 individual studies. PE, Physical Education; p-c, perceptual-cognitive; p-m, perceptual-motor.
Characteristics of studies investigating theory-driven instructional approaches to practice and coaching (n = 18).
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| Bozkurt ( | TUR | Pre- to post-test design with CG | 15 (2) | Age = 15 | n. r. | n. r. | A supplemental drill-based DL program to improve passing, dribbling, and feet-juggling was compared to a drill-based TL program with corrective feedback. |
| Coutinho et al. ( | POR | Pre- to post-test design with CG | 30 (4) | male | RL | An enrichment DL program to improve attackers' technical skills and creativity was compared to a non-active CG. DL included physical literacy, technical exercises, and SSGs. | |
| Gaspar et al. ( | POR | Pre- to post-test design | 20 (1) | n. r. | RL | Acute effects of a session blocked DL in comparison to a session blocked TL with movement feedback. Both sessions aimed at improving goal-shooting velocity and accuracy. | |
| Hossner et al. ( | GER | Pre- to post-test design with CG | 28 (3) | male | RL | Comparison of drill-based DL without augmented feedback, DL with augmented feedback, and methodologically structured TL to promote players' shooting accuracy. | |
| Ozuak and Çaglayan ( | TUR | Pre- to post-test design with CG | 52 (2) | n. r. | AL | Drill-based DL, implemented in the regular practice schedule, was compared to a CG that participated in the regular TL practice. | |
| Santos et al. ( | POR | Pre- to post-test design with CG | 40 (4) | n. r. | RL | Game-based DL, focusing on intertrial variability, was compared to game-based practice supported by specific instructions and error correction of a coach. The practice programs are aimed at improving the players' creativity. | |
| Schöllhorn et al. ( | GER | Pre- to post-test design with CG | 8 (2) | Adult | n. r. | 5th Div. | Drill-based DL to improve passing accuracy was compared to TL based on little inter-trial variability and descriptions of the ideal movement technique. |
| Schöllhorn et al. ( | GER | Pre-, to post-, and ret-test design with CG | 18 (2) | Adult | male | 5th & 7th Div. | Blocked DL to improve goal shooting accuracy was compared to TL based on a high number of repetitions and corrective feedback. |
| Schöllhorn et al. ( | GER | Pre-, to post-, and ret-test design with CG | 12 (3) | n. r. | 8th Div. | Random and blocked DL to improve ball control and shooting accuracy was compared to blocked TL focusing on an ideal movement technique and error corrections. | |
| Barquero-Ruiz et al. ( | SPA | Pre-test to post-test design | 20 (1) | male and female | LL | The TGFU intervention focused on principles of play in defense and the attack. Each session started with a game form followed by a teaching for understanding period. Technical skills were practiced in drills before returning to a modified game form. | |
| Harvey et al. ( | UK | Multiple baseline quasi-experimental design | 34 (2) | RangeFirstyear: 14–15RangeVarsity: 14–18 | male | RC & CP | A TGFU intervention focusing on: “defending as a unit of three players” was conducted. SSGs, phases of play (e.g., offensive vs. defensive on one goal), and functional technical/tactical practice were applied. |
| Práxedes et al. ( | SPA | Quasi-experimental design with CG | 18 (2) | n. r. | YL | TGFU, based on modified games and questioning of the coach to improve the players' offensive tactical behavior, was compared to TL, primarily including technical drills that differed from real game situations. | |
| Práxedes Pizarro et al. ( | SPA | Intra-group quasi-experimental design | 9 (1) | Male | RL | A TGFU intervention, including a question-and-answer approach by the coach, to improve the players' decision-making and skill execution was applied. The complexity of the practice program increased progressively during the intervention period. | |
| Sierra-Ríos et al. ( | SPA | Non-probabilistic inter-subject case design | 30 (2) | n. r. | CP | TGFU, based on modified games, was compared to a direct instructional model based on technical and analytical exercises. Interventions aimed at improving players' on- and off-the-ball decision-making and skill execution. | |
| Práxedes et al. ( | SPA | Quasi-experimental design | 19 (2) | n. r. | av. & low | Two NLP interventions to develop players' decision-making and skill execution were applied. In the first intervention, SSGs with numerical superiority in attack (+1 player) were conducted. In the second intervention, SSGs with numerical equality were applied. | |
| Práxedes et al. ( | SPA | Quasi-experimental design with CG | 19 (2) | male | LL | The effects of a NLP-intervention, using SSGs with numerical superiority in the attack, were compared to TL, prioritizing technical components. The NLP exercises referred to a principle of play (e.g., maintaining possession of the ball). | |
| Práxedes et al. ( | SPA | Intra-group quasi-experimental design | 19 (1) | n. r. | av. to low | Intervention based on the principles of NLP to improve the players' tactical decision-making and skill execution performance. SSCGs with numerical superiority were applied focusing on a tactical principle of play. | |
| Roberts et al. ( | UK | Randomized cross-over trial | 22 (2) | n. r. | YA | NLP, based on representative learning designs and perception-action couplings, was compared to a linear information-processing practice program regarding the promotion of attackers' individual learning objectives. | |
If authors did not sufficiently report the applied study design, the research group decided on an appropriate descriptive terminology. AL, Amateur Leagues; Av, average; CG, control group; Div., division; DL, differential learning; DLB, differential learning blocked; DLR, differential learning random; IG, intervention Group; LL, local level; NLP, non-linear pedagogy; n. r., not reported; PL, performance level; RL, regional level; TGFU, Teaching Games for Understanding; TL, traditional learning; YA, youth academy; YL, Spanish youth football league.
The 20 participants were randomly divided into two groups that practiced the same content, but the coaches changed between the groups to reduce clustering effects.
Characteristics of studies investigating specific aspects of practice or coaching (n = 17).
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| Boraczyński et al. ( | POL | Single-center, parallel, partially group matched, controlled, and longitudinal design | 75 (3) | Range: 10.1–11.9 | male | n. r. | Proprioceptive-coordination training (PCT; including 24 technical exercises in combination with coordination exercises) on the players' soccer-specific motor performance was compared to a usual care and a non-active CG. |
| Holt et al. ( | UK | Single subject, multiple baseline experiment | 5 (1) | Range: 10–12 | male | YA | The effectiveness of the passing-square to promote awareness, passing, and first touch skills was investigated. Based on criteria for successful technical execution, the intervention included individual goal setting, peer-assessed feedback, and group contingency. |
| Kösal et al. ( | TUR | Pre- to post-test design with CG | 45 (3) | Range: 10–13 | male | n. r. | An additional practice program, including combined technical and coordination exercises to promote soccer-specific technical skills, was compared to regular and unstructured practice CGs. |
| Miranda et al. ( | BRA | Pre- to post-test design | 13 (1) | Age = 17 | n. r. | NL | The effects of a practice program, including position-specific technical and tactical exercises, as well as gameplay situations on the players' technical performance, were investigated. |
| Montesano and Mazzeo ( | ITA | Pre- to post-design with CG | 20 (2) | n. r. | CP | The effects of additional technical practice on the players' passing and shooting performance were investigated and compared to a CG without additional practice. | |
| Weigelt et al. ( | UK | Pre- to post-test design with CG | 20 | Range: 19–20 | male | IM | Learning and transfer effects of additional, individual feet-juggling practice without any specific guidance or learning strategies were investigated and compared to a non-active CG. |
| Zago et al. ( | ITA | Pre- to post-test design with CG | 20 | male | RL | Practice, including technical drills and phases of play situations by using tape matrix structures as three-dimensional spatio constraints was compared to a CG that participated in technical drills, SSGs, and situation games without such spatio constraints. | |
| Guilherme et al. ( | POR | Randomized cross-over design | 50 (2) | male | EL | The intervention period included additional drill-based practices for improving soccer-specific technical skills in the non-preferred leg. The control period did not include additional exercises. | |
| Guilherme et al. ( | POR | Pre- to post-test design with CG | 71 (6) | male | CP | The IG participated in drill-based and technically focused practice with a more frequent use of the non-dominant leg. The CG participated in a practice program by using both legs equally. | |
| Haaland and Hoff ( | NOR | Pre- to post-test design with CG | 39 (2) | Range: 15–21 | male | CP | The IG participated in an increased volume of non-preferred leg practice within the team practice context. The effects were compared to a usual care CG. |
| Teixeira et al. ( | BRA | Pre- to post-test design with CG | 24 (2) | Range: 12–14 | n. r. | n. r. | The “non-preferred leg group” practiced 45 min in three out of five weekly sessions including drills and SSGs by only using the non-preferred leg. The “preferred-leg group” used both legs equally. |
| Witkowski et al. ( | POL | Pre- to post-test design with CG | 37 (3) | Age = 13 | male | EL | One group predominantly used the non-dominant leg in technical drills, while another group used both legs equally. The effects were compared to a regular practice CG. |
| Arslan et al. ( | TUR | Experimental parallel matched group design | 20 (2) | male | YA | The effects of game-based practice by using various forms of SSGs were compared to a running-based HIIT training program. | |
| Radziminski et al. ( | POL | Pre- to post-test design with CG | 20 (2) | n. r. | n. r. | The effects of a practice program including various forms of 3v3 SSGs on the players' technical actions were investigated and compared to a running-based HIIT program. | |
| Bekris et al. ( | GRE | Pre- to post-test design with CG | 54 (4) | n. r. | n. r. | The effects of technical practice with a size-2 ball in different frequencies and with different content were compared to a CG that practiced with a size-4 ball. | |
| Raastad et al. ( | NOR | Pre- to post-test design | 17 | male and female | RL | Two groups practiced soccer juggling in two different conditions: One group practiced with a smaller size 1 ball. The other group practiced with a larger size 4 ball. The test ball was a size 3 ball. | |
| Schwab et al. ( | GER | Pre- to post-, and ret-test design with CG | 56 (4) | Adol.: U15-U17 | male | LL | The effects of external compared to internal focus feedback on learning the knuckle ball free-kick technique were investigated. Specific instructions were delivered after every third free kick. |
If authors did not sufficiently report the study design, the research group decided on an appropriate descriptive terminology. Adol., adolescents; CG, control group; CP, competitive players; EG, experimental group; EL, elite level; EP = FD, first division; HIIT, High-intensity interval training; IG, intervention group; IM, intermediate Level; LL, Local level; LSPT, Loughborough Soccer Passing Test; NL, national level; n. r., not reported; RG, running group; RL, regional level; SSG, small-sided games; YA, youth academy.
Weigelt et al. (.
Zago et al. (.
Raastad et al. (.
Figure 2Quality in reporting and risk of bias in individual studies. D&B Score, Downs and Black score (all items). Notes: Results are presented as means with error bars that represent the standard deviation. The dashed lines show thresholds for low (≤ 35%) and high (≥ 70%) scores. It must be considered that the subscales external validity and power were calculated from only three and two items, respectively.
Soccer-specific outcome variables (n = 150) from perceptual-motor and perceptual-cognitive skill domains.
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| Shooting/kicking/striking ( | Decision-making cumulative ( |
| Dribbling ( | Passing ( |
| Passing ( | Dribbling ( |
| Juggling ( | |
| Ball reception/control ( |
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| Turns ( | Goal shooting ( |
| Awareness ( | |
| Ball bouncing ( |
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| Balance with ball ( | Adjust ( |
| Heading ( | Covers ( |
| 1v1 ( | |
| Execution time (LSST; |
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| Attempts ( | |
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| Fluency ( |
| Skill execution cumulative ( | Versatility ( |
| Passes ( | Fails ( |
| Dribbles ( | Originality ( |
| (Goal) shots (2; 2) | |
| Preferred foot performance ( | |
| Non-preferred foot performance ( |
Results in brackets represent the n of investigated variables (first number) and the n of different operationalizations (second number). Performance scores that were calculated from both perceptual-motor and perceptual-cognitive skill domains (n = 6) were not displayed in this table. LSST, Loughborough Shooting Skill Test.
Narrative synthesis of the effectiveness of interventions in controlled designs (n = 27).
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| Bozkurt ( | - DL ( | 12 (20) | 4 | U-Test and Wilcoxon | No significant differences between groups in technical outcomes were found at pre- or post-test. Thus, neither DL nor TL was found to be more effective for promoting soccer-specific techniques. | |
| Coutinho et al. ( | - DL U15 ( | 20 (25) | 10 | Non-clinical magnitude-based inferences | In U15, greater improvements after DL compared to TL in all technical variables, fluency, and versatility were found. In U17, DL only achieved greater improvements in shooting, while no effects in further outcomes were found. | |
| Hossner et al. ( | - DL ( | 12 (30) | 6 | Repeated measures ANOVA | No significant interactions between the DL and TL groups, as well as DL with and without feedback groups, were found. | |
| Ozuak and Çaglayan ( | - DL ( | 24 (40–50) | 8 | U-Test and Wilcoxon | The DL group achieved significantly greater improvements in creative speed and ball dribbling tests. No significant differences compared to the usual care group were found in juggling and passing. | |
| Santos et al. ( | - DL U13 ( | 40 (30) | 20 | ANCOVA | DL led to significantly greater effects in few creative components in both ages compared to TL. A decrease in fails in both ages was found. Significant differences were also found in attempts, originality, and most stressed in versatility. More significant and higher effect sizes were found in the U13 age group. | |
| Schöllhorn et al. ( | - DL ( | 12 (20–40) | 4 | U-test | Significant differences at post-test between groups reveal a greater effectiveness of DL in non-dominant foot passing accuracy compared to TL. | |
| Schöllhorn et al. ( | - DL ( | 12 (25) | 6 | U-test | Significantly greater improvements after DL in shooting accuracy were found. DL also outperformed TL after 1-year retention period. | |
| Schöllhorn et al. ( | - DL blocked ( | 8 (25) | 4 | H-Test | In the acquisition phase, only the blocked DL achieved greater improvements in goal shooting. At retention-test only the random DL outperformed TL. No differences in ball control were found. | |
| Práxedes et al. ( | - TGFU ( | 21 (60) | 12 | MANOVA | TGFU was found to be significantly more effective than TL in promoting decision-making (passing and dribbling). The only significant difference in the execution variables in favor of TGFU was found for passes. | |
| Sierra-Ríos et al. ( | - TGFU ( | 12 (80) | 6 | MANCOVA | A significantly greater reduction in the number of unsuccessful on-the-ball executions, a decrease in off-the-ball errors, and more successful off-the-ball actions after TGFU were present. No differences in the successful on-the-ball performance were found. | |
| Práxedes et al. ( | - NLP ( | 14 (60) | 7 | MANOVA | No significant group × time interaction was found. However, at post-test, the NLP group significantly outperformed the TL group in passing decisions and executions. No differences were found in dribbles. | |
| Roberts et al. ( | - NLP ( | 8 (60) | 4 | U-Test and Wilcoxon | Significantly greater improvements in the NLP group compared to the IP group were found in 1v1 and decision-making skills. No significant differences were found in the technical shooting proficiency or the execution time. | |
| Boraczyński et al. ( | - PCT ( | n.r. (30 min. add. practice) | 12 months | Repeated measures ANOVA | Only in the static balance test with a ball, a group × time interaction was found due to greater improvements in the PCT group at peri- and post-test compared to the usual care group. | |
| Kösal et al. ( | - Coordination ( | 30 (30 min. add. practice) | 10 | Repeated measures ANOVA | The coordination group improved in all variables and fewer within-group effects were found compared to the usual care group. The unstructured practice group did not improve in any variable. However, no interaction effects were reported. | |
| Montesano and Mazzeo ( | - Add. practice ( | n. r. (60-80) | n. r. | Descriptive analyses | Both groups descriptively improved in successful passes and goal shots. Descriptively greater improvements were found after add. practice. | |
| Weigelt et al. ( | - Intervention ( | 28 (10) | 4 | MANOVA | A significant time x group effect due to improvements in knee juggling and ball control with both feet (transfer effect), as well as a trend toward better feet-juggling performance, was found. | |
| Zago et al. ( | - Intervention ( | 38 ( | 22 | Repeated measures ANOVA | A significant time × group interaction was found in the LSPT performance (execution time) due to greater improvements in the IG. No significant interactions in other variables were found. | |
| Guilherme et al. ( | Cross-over: | 48 (20) | 16 | Repeated measures ANOVA | The non-dom. leg practice significantly increased the utilization rate during match-play. The interruption of the additional practice during the retention period partially reversed this effect. | |
| Guilherme et al. ( | - NPL U13 ( | 108 (20) | 36 | Repeated measures ANOVA | The experimental practice program led to a significantly greater utilization rate of the non-preferred leg during match-play, while the use of the preferred leg significantly decreased. | |
| Haaland and Hoff ( | - Intervention ( | n. r. (n. r.) | 8 | Repeated measures ANOVA | Significantly greater improvements in the intervention group compared to the CG in both the dominant and non-dominant legs in dribbling, volley shooting, and one-touch passing variables. | |
| Teixeira et al. ( | - 12-year PL ( | 80 (45) | 16 | Repeated measures ANOVA | Only in speed dribbling, the lateral asymmetry was significantly reduced from pre- to post-test in the non-preferred-leg group. In other variables, no significant differences between groups were found due to improvements in both the preferred and non-preferred-leg groups. | |
| Witkowski et al. ( | - Non-dom-leg ( | 144 (n. r.) | 12 months | t-tests | Both the non-dominant and dominant leg groups achieved greater improvements in technical outcomes compared to the usual care group. | |
| Arslan et al. ( | - SSG ( | 10 (10–18) | 5 | Repeated measures ANOVA | Both groups improved in their technical performance from pre- to post-test. Higher within-group effects were found in the SSG group. No interaction effects were reported. | |
| Radziminski et al. ( | - SSG ( | 16 (90) | 8 | Repeated measures ANOVA | No significant group × time interaction was found. The performance increased in both the SSG and Running groups. | |
| Bekris et al. ( | - Competitive ( | 12 (20–30) | n. r. | Repeated measures ANOVA | Significantly greater improvements in juggling, running with the ball, and turning in all intervention groups compared to the CG were reported. No effects in passing were found. | |
| Raastad et al. ( | - Smaller ball ( | 24 (10) | 6 | Repeated measures ANOVA | The ball juggling performance of both groups increased from pre- to post-test, but no interaction effect regarding transfer effects was found. | |
| Schwab et al. ( | - Internal adol. ( | 6 (20) | 3 | Repeated measures ANOVA | External focus feedback led to a significantly greater reduction in the rotational ball velocity from pre- to post and pre- to ret-test. No effects on the linear ball velocity were found. | |
Add., additional; Adol., adolescent; DI, Direct Instruction; DL, Differential Learning; DL and FB, Differential Learning and Feedback; HIIT, High-Intensity Interval Training; LSST, Loughborough Shooting Skill Test; TL, Traditional Learning; TGFU, Teaching Games for Understanding; NPL, non-preferred leg; PL, preferred leg; SSG, small-sided games.
Further variables, that do not correspond to the perceptual-motor or perceptual-cognitive skill domains (e.g., physiological outcomes), were investigated in the study.
Arslan et al. (.
Recalculated effect sizes for perceptual-motor and perceptual-cognitive outcomes from controlled designs.
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| DL (9) | 1 | 8 | 4 | 43 | 21 | 0.49 | −0.15–2.37 | 26 | 0.45 | −0.23–1.92 |
| TGFU (5) | 3 | 2 | 0 | 10 | 6 | 1.98 | 0.45–2.80 | 4 | 1.89 | 0.90–2.62 |
| NLP (4) | 2 | 2 | 2 | 5 | 5 | 0.58 | 0.17–1.05 | 2 | 0.83 | 0.60–1.05 |
| Drill-based P. (7) | 2 | 5 | 6 | 0 | 6 | 0.73 | 0.12–1.20 | – | – | – |
| Non-dom. Leg (5) | 0 | 5 | 10 | 0 | 10 | 1.16 | 0.82–2.91 | – | – | – |
| Game-based P. (2) | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Mod. ball sizes (2) | 0 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0.36 | – | – | – | – |
| Instructions (1) | 0 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 0.35 | 0.11–0.59 | – | – | – |
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| 8 | 27 | 25 | 58 | 51 | 0.74 | −0.15–2.91 | 32 | 0.61 | −0.23–2.62 |
All effect sizes comparing intervention and control groups from pre- to post, but also from pre- to ret-test were included in this overview. CD, controlled designs; UCD, uncontrolled designs. P., Practice, sig., significant. Effect sizes from studies on instructional approaches are provided in the upper half of the table. Effect sizes from studies on specific aspects of practice or coaching are presented below.
Schöllhorn et al. (.
Práxedes et al. (.
Guilherme et al. (.
No effects for game-based studies could be recalculated due to missing data.