Publication | Open Access
A Preventive Model for Hamstring Injuries in Professional Soccer: Learning Algorithms
98
Citations
36
References
2019
Year
Preventive ModelInjury PreventionSport InjuryKinesiologySport-related InjuriesSport ScienceHealth SciencesHigh RiskSport RehabilitationSport Injury PreventionRehabilitationProfessional Soccer PlayersProfessional SoccerPhysical TherapyHigh-performance SportExercise PhysiologyLearning AlgorithmsHuman MovementStrain Injury
Hamstring strain injury (HSI) is one of the most prevalent and severe injury in professional soccer. The purpose was to analyze and compare the predictive ability of a range of machine learning techniques to select the best performing injury risk factor model to identify professional soccer players at high risk of HSIs. A total of 96 male professional soccer players underwent a pre-season screening evaluation that included a large number of individual, psychological and neuromuscular measurements. Injury surveillance was prospectively employed to capture all the HSI occurring in the 2013/2014 season. There were 18 HSIs. Injury distribution was 55.6% dominant leg and 44.4% non-dominant leg. The model generated by the SmooteBoostM1 technique with a cost-sensitive ADTree as the base classifier reported the best evaluation criteria (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve score=0.837, true positive rate=77.8%, true negative rate=83.8%) and hence was considered the best for predicting HSI. The prediction model showed moderate to high accuracy for identifying professional soccer players at risk of HSI during pre-season screenings. Therefore, the model developed might help coaches, physical trainers and medical practitioners in the decision-making process for injury prevention.
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