--- _id: '32451' abstract: - lang: eng text: Athletes in team sports have to quickly visually perceive actions of opponents and teammates while executing their own movements. These continuous actions are performed under time pressure and may contribute to a non-contact ACL injury. However, ACL injury screening and prevention programmes are primarily based on standardised movements in a predictable environment. The sports environment provides much greater cognitive demand because athletes must attend their attention to numerous external stimuli and inhibit impulsive actions. Any deficit or delay in attentional processing may contribute to an inability to correct potential errors in complex coordination, resulting in knee positions that increase the ACL injury risk. In this viewpoint, we advocate that ACL injury screening should include the sports specific neurocognitive demands. article_number: e001091 author: - first_name: Alli full_name: Gokeler, Alli last_name: Gokeler - first_name: Anne full_name: Benjaminse, Anne last_name: Benjaminse - first_name: Francesco full_name: Della Villa, Francesco last_name: Della Villa - first_name: Fillippo full_name: Tosarelli, Fillippo last_name: Tosarelli - first_name: Evert full_name: Verhagen, Evert last_name: Verhagen - first_name: Jochen full_name: Baumeister, Jochen last_name: Baumeister citation: ama: 'Gokeler A, Benjaminse A, Della Villa F, Tosarelli F, Verhagen E, Baumeister J. Anterior cruciate ligament injury mechanisms through a neurocognition lens: implications for injury screening. BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine. 2021;7(2). doi:10.1136/bmjsem-2021-001091' apa: 'Gokeler, A., Benjaminse, A., Della Villa, F., Tosarelli, F., Verhagen, E., & Baumeister, J. (2021). Anterior cruciate ligament injury mechanisms through a neurocognition lens: implications for injury screening. BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine, 7(2), Article e001091. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjsem-2021-001091' bibtex: '@article{Gokeler_Benjaminse_Della Villa_Tosarelli_Verhagen_Baumeister_2021, title={Anterior cruciate ligament injury mechanisms through a neurocognition lens: implications for injury screening}, volume={7}, DOI={10.1136/bmjsem-2021-001091}, number={2e001091}, journal={BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine}, publisher={BMJ}, author={Gokeler, Alli and Benjaminse, Anne and Della Villa, Francesco and Tosarelli, Fillippo and Verhagen, Evert and Baumeister, Jochen}, year={2021} }' chicago: 'Gokeler, Alli, Anne Benjaminse, Francesco Della Villa, Fillippo Tosarelli, Evert Verhagen, and Jochen Baumeister. “Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury Mechanisms through a Neurocognition Lens: Implications for Injury Screening.” BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine 7, no. 2 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjsem-2021-001091.' ieee: 'A. Gokeler, A. Benjaminse, F. Della Villa, F. Tosarelli, E. Verhagen, and J. Baumeister, “Anterior cruciate ligament injury mechanisms through a neurocognition lens: implications for injury screening,” BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine, vol. 7, no. 2, Art. no. e001091, 2021, doi: 10.1136/bmjsem-2021-001091.' mla: 'Gokeler, Alli, et al. “Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury Mechanisms through a Neurocognition Lens: Implications for Injury Screening.” BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine, vol. 7, no. 2, e001091, BMJ, 2021, doi:10.1136/bmjsem-2021-001091.' short: A. Gokeler, A. Benjaminse, F. Della Villa, F. Tosarelli, E. Verhagen, J. Baumeister, BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine 7 (2021). date_created: 2022-08-01T19:13:37Z date_updated: 2022-12-16T15:46:56Z department: - _id: '17' doi: 10.1136/bmjsem-2021-001091 intvolume: ' 7' issue: '2' keyword: - Physical Therapy - Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation - Orthopedics and Sports Medicine language: - iso: eng publication: BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine publication_identifier: issn: - 2055-7647 publication_status: published publisher: BMJ status: public title: 'Anterior cruciate ligament injury mechanisms through a neurocognition lens: implications for injury screening' type: journal_article user_id: '46' volume: 7 year: '2021' ...