2017
DOI: 10.1007/s11332-017-0364-7
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Relative age effect in males, but not females, undergraduate students of sport science

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Cited by 5 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Therefore, further studies should provide wider scenarios able to show data from different Italian soccer categories along several seasons. Moreover, the present study focused only on male athletes, highlighting the need to investigate the possible gender difference in the Italian context, in line with previous studies [ 9 , 36 ]. Then, to assess the players’ RAE, it has been only considered the birthdate, avoiding any reference to the individual performance (e.g., number of the match involvement or total minutes played during a season) [ 17 ] or salary engagements [ 24 ], highlighting how this additional information might be useful to better describe RAE.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 63%
“…Therefore, further studies should provide wider scenarios able to show data from different Italian soccer categories along several seasons. Moreover, the present study focused only on male athletes, highlighting the need to investigate the possible gender difference in the Italian context, in line with previous studies [ 9 , 36 ]. Then, to assess the players’ RAE, it has been only considered the birthdate, avoiding any reference to the individual performance (e.g., number of the match involvement or total minutes played during a season) [ 17 ] or salary engagements [ 24 ], highlighting how this additional information might be useful to better describe RAE.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 63%
“…This leads to an over-representation of athletes born close to selection date. This phenomenon is recognized with the name of Relative Age Effect (RAE) (Barnsley et al, 1985; Musch and Grondin, 2001; Boccia et al, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, the talent identification could be influenced by environmental factors, concerning social constructs (Wattie et al, 2015) like physical and sociocultural environment policies and social agents such as parents, coaches, or athletes (Hancock et al, 2013). The term relative age effect (RAE) refers to an asymmetry in the birth distribution of a population where there is an over-representation of athletes born close to the date of selection (Cobley et al, 2009; Boccia et al, 2017b). The RAE was first observed in Canadian ice hockey (Barnsley et al, 1985) and subsequently in many other team sports, such as soccer (Steingröver et al, 2017; Brustio et al, 2018; Cumming et al, 2018; Doyle and Bottomley, 2018; Peña-González et al, 2018), Australian football (Haycraft et al, 2018), basketball (Arrieta et al, 2016), and rugby (Till et al, 2010), as well as in individual sports, such as swimming (Cobley et al, 2018) alpine ski (Müller et al, 2016; Bjerke et al, 2017) wrestling (Fukuda et al, 2017), and track and field (Romann and Cobley, 2015; Brazo-Sayavera et al, 2017, 2018; Kearney et al, 2018; Romann et al, 2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%