Exploring the relationship between cognitive abilities and motor performance in athletes with intellectual disabilities
Luca Cavaggioni, Damiano Formenti, Linda Casalini, Francesco Granito, Chiara Magro, Andrea Manente, Simona Canton, Nicola Lovecchio, Paolo Castiglioni, Giampiero Merati

TL;DR
This study explores how cognitive abilities and motor performance are linked in basketball athletes with intellectual disabilities.
Contribution
The study identifies specific correlations between cognitive tests and motor performance metrics in athletes with intellectual disabilities.
Findings
Clinical reaction time showed a strong negative relationship with handgrip strength and jump performance.
Cognitive performance in the Bells test correlated positively with BMI and jump power outcomes.
Regression models showed that motor performance variables explained a significant portion of cognitive performance variance.
Abstract
Basketball practice for athletes with intellectual disabilities (ID) is an ancient activity that stimulates cognitive and motor performance domains. This study aims to verify the association between cognitive performance and motor abilities in basketball athletes with ID. A total of 23 participants with ID were screened on cognition (clinical reaction time and Bells test 30 s and 90 s), motor performance [handgrip strength test (HST), countermovement jump (CMJ), static balance], and anthropometry [body mass index (BMI) and skinfolds] in a cross-sectional design. A strong negative relationship was observed between clinical reaction time with HST and CMJ variables. A strong positive association was also found between Bells test 30 s with anthropometric variables (BMI) and power-related CMJ outcomes. Linear regression models revealed that the CMJ concentric mean force explained 34.3% of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChildren's Physical and Motor Development · Sports Performance and Training · Down syndrome and intellectual disability research
