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Monoem Haddad
Researcher at Qatar University
Publications - 70
Citations - 1608
Monoem Haddad is an academic researcher from Qatar University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Rating of perceived exertion. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 57 publications receiving 1103 citations. Previous affiliations of Monoem Haddad include Florida State University College of Arts and Sciences & Technological and Higher Education Institute of Hong Kong.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Session-RPE Method for Training Load Monitoring: Validity, Ecological Usefulness, and Influencing Factors.
TL;DR: These studies confirmed the validity and good reliability and internal consistency of session-RPE method in several sports and physical activities with men and women of different age categories (children, adolescents, and adults) among various expertise levels.
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Greater effects of high- compared with moderate-intensity interval training on cardio-metabolic variables, blood leptin concentration and ratings of perceived exertion in obese adolescent females.
Ghazi Racil,Jeremy Coquart,Wassim Elmontassar,Monoem Haddad,Ruben Goebel,Anis Chaouachi,Mohamed Amri,Karim Chamari +7 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that high-intensity interval training may produce more positive effects on health determinants in comparison with the same training mode at a moderate intensity.
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Monitoring training load and fatigue in soccer players with physiological markers.
TL;DR: The interests and limitations of heart rate (HR), HR variability (HRV) and biochemical variables (blood, urinary and hormonal variations) were analysed, with a special focus on daily measures (before, during and after training) and monitoring throughout a whole season.
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Influence of fatigue, stress, muscle soreness and sleep on perceived exertion during submaximal effort
Monoem Haddad,Anis Chaouachi,Del P. Wong,Carlo Castagna,Mourad Hambli,Olivier Hue,Karim Chamari +6 more
TL;DR: The results of the present study suggest that fatigue, stress, DOMS and sleep are not major contributors of perceived exertion during traditional soccer training without excessive training loads and the objectivity and utility of RPE as a psychological tool for monitoring training during traditional football training is demonstrated.
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Effects of Ramadan on the Diurnal Variations of Repeated-Sprint Performance
Asma Aloui,Anis Chaouachi,Hamdi Chtourou,Del P. Wong,Monoem Haddad,Karim Chamari,Nizar Souissi +6 more
TL;DR: Fatigability is higher in the afternoon during Ramadan, and, therefore, training and competition should be scheduled at the time of day when physical performance is less affected.