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Cloe Cummins

Researcher at University of New England (Australia)

Publications -  37
Citations -  1045

Cloe Cummins is an academic researcher from University of New England (Australia). The author has contributed to research in topics: League & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 33 publications receiving 769 citations. Previous affiliations of Cloe Cummins include Leeds Beckett University & University of Sydney.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Global Positioning Systems (GPS) and Microtechnology Sensors in Team Sports: A Systematic Review

TL;DR: It is highlighted that GPS technology has been used more often across a range of football codes than across other team sports, and there is a lack of consistency in the definition of speed zones and activity descriptors, both within and across team sports.
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Importance, Reliability, and Usefulness of Acceleration Measures in Team Sports.

TL;DR: It is proposed that averaging the acceleration/deceleration demands over an activity may be a more appropriate method compared with threshold-based methods, because a greater reliability between units, while not sacrificing sensitivity to within-subject and between-subject changes.
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Analysis of Physical Collisions in Elite National Rugby League Match Play.

TL;DR: Positional differences exist, with hit-up and wide-running forwards experiencing greater collision events than adjustables and outside backs, which are indicative of the significant collision profiles in professional rugby league.
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Match and training injuries in women's rugby union: a systematic review of published studies

TL;DR: The injury epidemiology for women’s rugby-15s and rugby-7s match and training environments was described and the incidence of injury was lower than men”s professional Rugby World Cup and Rugby 7s competitions but similar to male youth rugby- 15s players.
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Quantifying the collision dose in rugby league: a systematic review, meta-analysis, and critical analysis

TL;DR: The aim of this review was to characterise the dose of collisions experienced within senior male rugby league match-play and training, and systematically and critically evaluate the methods used to describe the relative and absolute frequency and intensity of collisions.