Goethe University Frankfurt, Institute of Sport Sciences, Ginnheimer Landstrasse 39, Frankfurt am Main, 60487, Germany.
German Sport University Cologne, Institute of Psychology, Cologne, Germany.
Sci Rep. 2024 Nov 1;14(1):26351. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-76977-8.
Elite athletes are high-performance outliers within their specific sports. Even though science seeks to understand the nature of expertise and elite performance, much knowledge remains compartmentalized within subdisciplines. Despite this multidimensionality being acknowledged, an interdisciplinary approach to understanding elite athletes is still rare. This paper synthesizes insights across scientific domains in order to describe the population and individual characteristics of elite athletes. We analyzed diagnostic data from approximately 300 German squad athletes across eight different sports (e.g., gymnastics, volleyball, ice hockey, 3 × 3 basketball etc., age = 18.95 ± 4.84 years, age = 19.32 ± 4.19 years) with expertise values ranging from 2 (low expertise) to 16 (high expertise). Data covered muscular strength, lower-body dynamics, muscle-power genetics, blood micronutrients, basic cognitive function, mental health, social support, and training conditions. Results of logistic regressions identified basic cognitive function (B = 0.89) and well-balanced blood micronutrients (B = 1.22) as critical factors distinguishing elite athletes. Additionally, multiple linear regressions suggested that lower-body dynamics (ß = 0.72) is related to increasing expertise values. We examined interactions between determinants of elite performance, and found that social support is positively associated with mental health and training conditions, whereas muscular strength correlates with lower-body dynamics. Focusing on top elite athletes in contrast to semi-elite athletes, we found higher within-group similarities in basic cognitive function and blood micronutrients. Findings indicate the need for a systemic, individualized, and comprehensive model using individual-based profiles.
精英运动员是其特定运动项目中的高绩效佼佼者。尽管科学试图理解专业知识和精英表现的本质,但许多知识仍然局限于子学科内。尽管承认了这种多维性,但跨学科方法来理解精英运动员仍然很少见。本文综合了各个科学领域的见解,以描述精英运动员的群体和个体特征。我们分析了来自八个不同运动项目(如体操、排球、冰球、3x3 篮球等)的大约 300 名德国队运动员的诊断数据(年龄=18.95±4.84 岁,年龄=19.32±4.19 岁),他们的专业技能值从 2(低专业技能)到 16(高专业技能)不等。数据涵盖肌肉力量、下肢动态、肌肉力量遗传学、血液微量营养素、基本认知功能、心理健康、社会支持和训练条件。逻辑回归的结果确定了基本认知功能(B=0.89)和平衡良好的血液微量营养素(B=1.22)是区分精英运动员的关键因素。此外,多元线性回归表明下肢动态(ß=0.72)与专业技能值的增加有关。我们研究了精英表现决定因素之间的相互作用,发现社会支持与心理健康和训练条件呈正相关,而肌肉力量与下肢动态相关。与半精英运动员相比,关注顶级精英运动员,我们发现基本认知功能和血液微量营养素的组内相似性更高。研究结果表明需要使用基于个体的档案,采用系统的、个体化的和全面的模型。