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Joseph T. Costello

Researcher at University of Portsmouth

Publications -  108
Citations -  3123

Joseph T. Costello is an academic researcher from University of Portsmouth. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cryotherapy & Heat acclimation. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 107 publications receiving 2357 citations. Previous affiliations of Joseph T. Costello include Queensland University of Technology & University of Limerick.

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Where are all the female participants in Sports and Exercise Medicine research

TL;DR: In this article, the ratio of male and female participants in Sports and Exercise Medicine research was estimated by using Chi-square analysis and cross-tabulations. But, the average percentage of female participants per article across the journals ranged from 35% to 37% and females were significantly underrepresented across all of the journals.
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Thermographic imaging in sports and exercise medicine: A Delphi study and consensus statement on the measurement of human skin temperature

TL;DR: It is intended that the TISEM can also be applied to evaluate bias in thermographic studies and to guide practitioners in the use of this technique.
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Effect of acute hypoxia on cognition: a systematic review and meta-regression analysis

TL;DR: There were no significant differences between central executive and non‐executive, perception/attention and short‐term memory, tasks, and low (35–60 mmHg) PaO2 was the key predictor of cognitive performance, independent of whether the exposure was in hypobaric hypoxic or normobaric Hypoxia conditions.
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The human ventilatory response to stress: rate or depth?

TL;DR: This review investigates the impact of stressors including: cold, heat, hypoxia, pain and panic on the contributions of ƒR and VT to V̇E to see if they differ with different stressors, and considers moderating factors, including exercise, sex, intensity and duration of stimuli.
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Effects of whole-body cryotherapy (−110°C) on proprioception and indices of muscle damage

TL;DR: WBC, administered 24 h after eccentric exercise, is ineffective in alleviating muscle soreness or enhancing muscle force recovery, and the results of this study indicate no increased risk of proprioceptive‐related injury following WBC.