Skilled passing in football may regress following an anterior cruciate ligament injury as a result of cortical changes: preliminary EEG evidence
D.Y. Piskin, G. Cobani, T. Lehmann, D. Büchel, J. Baumeister, in: 2025.
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European Congress of Sport Science
Conference Location
Rimini
Conference Date
2025-07-01 – 2025-07-04
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Piskin DY, Cobani G, Lehmann T, Büchel D, Baumeister J. Skilled passing in football may regress following an anterior cruciate ligament injury as a result of cortical changes: preliminary EEG evidence. In: ; 2025.
Piskin, D. Y., Cobani, G., Lehmann, T., Büchel, D., & Baumeister, J. (2025). Skilled passing in football may regress following an anterior cruciate ligament injury as a result of cortical changes: preliminary EEG evidence. European Congress of Sport Science , Rimini.
@inproceedings{Piskin_Cobani_Lehmann_Büchel_Baumeister_2025, title={Skilled passing in football may regress following an anterior cruciate ligament injury as a result of cortical changes: preliminary EEG evidence}, author={Piskin, Daghan Yüksel and Cobani, Gjergji and Lehmann, Tim and Büchel, Daniel and Baumeister, Jochen}, year={2025} }
Piskin, Daghan Yüksel, Gjergji Cobani, Tim Lehmann, Daniel Büchel, and Jochen Baumeister. “Skilled Passing in Football May Regress Following an Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury as a Result of Cortical Changes: Preliminary EEG Evidence,” 2025.
D. Y. Piskin, G. Cobani, T. Lehmann, D. Büchel, and J. Baumeister, “Skilled passing in football may regress following an anterior cruciate ligament injury as a result of cortical changes: preliminary EEG evidence,” presented at the European Congress of Sport Science , Rimini, 2025.
Piskin, Daghan Yüksel, et al. Skilled Passing in Football May Regress Following an Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury as a Result of Cortical Changes: Preliminary EEG Evidence. 2025.
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