A Study of Racket Weight Adaptation in Advanced and Beginner Badminton Players

The jump smash is the most aggressive manoeuvre in badminton. Racket parameters may be the key factor affecting the performance of jump smash. Previous studies have focused only on the biomechanical characteristics of athletes or on racket parameters in isolation, with less observation of the overal...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inApplied bionics and biomechanics Vol. 2024; pp. 8908294 - 10
Main Authors Pan, Zhengye, Liu, Lushuai, Li, Xingman, Ma, Yunchao
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Egypt Hindawi 25.01.2024
John Wiley & Sons, Inc
Hindawi Limited
Wiley
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Summary:The jump smash is the most aggressive manoeuvre in badminton. Racket parameters may be the key factor affecting the performance of jump smash. Previous studies have focused only on the biomechanical characteristics of athletes or on racket parameters in isolation, with less observation of the overall performance of the human-racket system. This study aims to explore the effects of different racket weights on neuromuscular control strategies in advanced and beginner players. Nonnegative matrix factorisation (NMF) was used to extract the muscle synergies of players when jumping smash using different rackets (3U, 5U), and K-means clustering was used to obtain the fundamental synergies. Uncontrolled manifold (UCM) analyses were used to establish links between synergy and motor performance, and surface electromyography (sEMG) was mapped to each spinal cord segment. The study found significant differences (P <0.05) in the postural muscles of skilled players and significant differences (P <0.001) in the upper-limb muscles of beginners when the racket weight was increased. Advanced players adapt to the increase in racket weight primarily by adjusting the timing of the activation of the third synergy. Combined synergy in advanced players is mainly focused on the backswing, while that in beginners is mainly focused on the frontswing. This suggests that advanced players may be more adept at utilising the postural muscles and their coordination with the upper-limb muscles to adapt to different rackets. In addition, the motor experience can help athletes adapt more quickly to heavier rackets, and this adaptation occurs primarily by adjusting the temporal phase and covariation characteristics of the synergies rather than by increasing the number of synergies.
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Academic Editor: Francesca Cordella
ISSN:1176-2322
1754-2103
DOI:10.1155/2024/8908294