Data from: Core executive functions are associated with success in young elite soccer players
Physical capacity and coordination cannot alone predict success in team sports such as soccer. Instead, more focus has been directed towards the importance of cognitive abilities, and it has been suggested that executive functions (EF) are fundamentally important for success in soccer. However, exec...
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Zusammenfassung: | Physical capacity and coordination cannot alone predict success in team
sports such as soccer. Instead, more focus has been directed towards the
importance of cognitive abilities, and it has been suggested that
executive functions (EF) are fundamentally important for success in
soccer. However, executive functions are going through a steep development
from adolescence to adulthood. Moreover, more complex EF involving
manipulation of information (higher level EF) develop later than simple
executive functions such as those linked to simple working memory capacity
(Core EF). The link between EF and success in young soccer players is
therefore not obvious. In the present study we investigated whether EF are
associated with success in soccer in young elite soccer players. We
performed tests measuring core EF (a demanding working memory task
involving a variable n-back task; dWM) and higher level EF (Design Fluency
test; DF). Color-Word Interference Test and Trail Making Test were
performed on an exploratory level as they contain a linguistic element.
The lower level EF test (dWM) was taken from CogStateSport computerized
concussion testing and the higher level EF test (DF) was from Delis-Kaplan
Executive Function System test battery (D-KEFS). In a group of young elite
soccer players (n = 30; aged 12–19 years) we show that they perform better
than the norm in both the dWM (+0.49 SD) and DF (+0.86 SD). Moreover, we
could show that both dWM and DF correlate with the number of goals the
players perform during the season. The effect was more prominent for dWM
(r = 0.437) than for DF (r = 0.349), but strongest for a combined
measurement (r = 0.550). The effect was still present when we controlled
for intelligence, length and age in a partial correlation analysis. Thus,
our study suggests that both core and higher level EF may predict success
in soccer also in young players. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.4p8k8 |