Ravensbergen Henrike Joanna Cornelie, Genee Amarens Doutsen, Mann David Lindsay
Department of Human Movement Sciences, Faculty of Behavioural and Movement Sciences, IPC Research and Development Centre for the Classification of Athletes with Vision Impairment, Amsterdam Movement Sciences, Institute for Brain and Behavior, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Front Psychol. 2018 Oct 17;9:1756. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01756. eCollection 2018.
The International Paralympic Committee requires their member sports to develop a classification system that is sport-specific, meaning that the specific 'class' in which an athlete competes should be suitable for the degree to which the athlete's impairment affects performance in that particular sport. However, swimmers with vision impairment (VI) currently compete in classes that were developed on the basis of legal definitions of blindness, failing to consider how vision impacts swimming performance. The aim of this study was to establish expert guidance on the specific requirements for a sport-specific system of classification for VI swimming. A three-round Delphi review was conducted with a panel of 16 people with expertise in VI swimming either as an athlete, coach, administrator, or scientist. There was clear consensus (86%) among the panel that the current classification system used for VI swimming fails to fulfill the aim of minimizing the impact of VI on the outcome of competition. Particularly, the panel agreed that there are a range of aspects of visual function (e.g., depth perception and contrast sensitivity) that are important for optimal swimming performance, yet are not assessed using the current classification system. The panel also identified nine performance components of a swimming race that are mostly likely to be affected by VI. Interestingly, these were spread across all four major segments (start, clean swim, turn, and finish), and weren't necessarily those performance determinants generally used by performance analysts and coaches. There was also strong agreement that the age at which VI is acquired will substantially impact the ability of a swimmer to reach their full potential in the pool. The main implication is that changes are required to the way that swimmers with VI are classified for para-sport competition. Clear guidance has been provided for how to further the development of an evidence-based classification system.
国际残奥委会要求其成员体育项目制定特定于该运动的分级系统,这意味着运动员参赛的特定“级别”应适合其损伤对该特定运动项目表现的影响程度。然而,目前视力障碍(VI)游泳运动员所参加的级别是基于失明的法律定义制定的,没有考虑视力如何影响游泳表现。本研究的目的是就视力障碍游泳特定于该运动的分级系统的具体要求建立专家指导意见。对16名在视力障碍游泳方面具有专业知识的人员组成的小组进行了三轮德尔菲评审,这些人员包括运动员、教练、管理人员或科学家。小组中存在明确的共识(86%),即目前用于视力障碍游泳的分级系统未能实现将视力障碍对比赛结果的影响降至最低的目标。特别是,小组一致认为,视觉功能的一系列方面(如深度感知和对比敏感度)对于最佳游泳表现很重要,但目前的分级系统并未对其进行评估。小组还确定了游泳比赛中最有可能受视力障碍影响的九个表现要素。有趣的是,这些要素分布在所有四个主要环节(出发、全程游泳、转身和终点),并不一定是表现分析师和教练通常使用的那些表现决定因素。小组也强烈认同,视力障碍出现的年龄将极大地影响游泳运动员在泳池中发挥其全部潜力的能力。主要的影响是,需要改变视力障碍游泳运动员参加残疾人体育比赛的分级方式。已就如何进一步发展基于证据的分级系统提供了明确的指导意见。