Northampton Electronic Collection of Theses and Research

Expectation of pain intensity does not influence neuromuscular performance but does influence pain perception during a maximal isometric knee extension task

Wing, A. E., Jones, P., Campbell, J. and Kay, A. D. (2011) Expectation of pain intensity does not influence neuromuscular performance but does influence pain perception during a maximal isometric knee extension task. Other presented to: British Association of Sport and Exercise Sciences (BASES) Annual Conference: Fatigue: An interdisciplinary approach, University of Essex, 2011-09-06 - 2011-09-08.

18688:38180
[thumbnail of Wing_etal_2011_Expectation_of_pain_intensity_does_not_influence_neuromuscular_performance_but_does_influence_pain_perception_during_a_maximal_isometric_knee_extension_task]
Wing_etal_2011_Expectation_of_pain_intensity_does_not_influence_neuromuscular_performance_but_does_influence_pain_perception_during_a_maximal_isometric_knee_extension_task
Wing_etal_2011_Expectation_of_pain_intensity_does_not_influence_neuromuscular_performance_but_does_influence_pain_perception_during_a_maximal_isometric_knee_extension_task.pdf - Accepted Version
Information
Edit Item