Blar i Brage NIH på forfatter "Wik, Eirik Halvorsen"
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Activity profiles and fatigue in elite female and male team handball: individual and team characteristics
Wik, Eirik Halvorsen (Master thesis, 2015)Handball matches place diverse physical demands on players, which over the course of games may result in fatigue and decreased activity levels. However, studies are limited, and activity profiles are often obtained using ... -
Activity profiles in international female team handball using PlayerLoadTM
Wik, Eirik Halvorsen; Luteberget, Live; Spencer, Matt (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2016)Team handball matches place diverse physical demands on players, which may result in fatigue and decreased activity levels. However, previous speed-based methods of quantifying player activity may not be sensitive for ... -
Injuries in elite male youth football and athletics: Growth and maturation as potential risk factors
Wik, Eirik Halvorsen (Doctoral thesis, 2021)Background: Elite youth athletes participate in intense and structured training programmes to realise their performance potential, but their development may be interrupted by injuries. To reduce the impact of injuries we ... -
Involving research‐invested clinicians in data collection affects injury incidence in youth football
Wik, Eirik Halvorsen; Materne, Olivier; Chamari, Karim; Duque, Juan David Peña; Horobeanu, Cosmin; Salcinovic, Benjamin; Bahr, Roald; Johnson, Amanda (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2019)It is well established that differences in injury definition and recording methodology restrict comparisons between injury surveillance programmes. There is, however, little documentation of the variation that can exist ... -
Is the Acute: Chronic Workload Ratio (ACWR) Associated with Risk of Time-Loss Injury in Professional Team Sports? A Systematic Review of Methodology, Variables and Injury Risk in Practical Situations
Andrade, Renato; Wik, Eirik Halvorsen; Rebelo-Marques, Alexandre; Blanch, Peter; Whiteley, Rod; Espregueira-Mendes, João; Gabbett, Tim J. (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2020)Background: The acute: chronic workload ratio (ACWR) is an index of the acute workload relative to the cumulative chronic workloads. The monitoring of physical workloads using the ACWR has emerged and been hypothesized as ...