The effectiveness of the impact of the percentage of contribution of motor perception and neuromuscular coordination of the arms in the performance of the right straight punch for junior boxers
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.58305/ejsst.v14i54.572Keywords:
Effectiveness of effect, motor perception, neuromuscular coordinationAbstract
Due to the importance of boxing, the researchers sought to shed light on the perception of the sensory motor because of the great importance of perception from the mental side in its reliance on perception and its important complex processes in changing information and its association with the sensory and motor side for its great contribution to the player's position and his awareness of his surroundings and himself and linking those percentages contributing to boxing from the neurological coordination of the arms and the accuracy of the straight punch for junior boxers. The research problem was represented by answering the following question: What is the percentage of contribution of sensory motor perception and neuromuscular coordination of the arms to the accuracy of the right straight punch for junior boxers? The most important objectives of the research were to identify the percentage of contribution of sensory-motor perception and neuromuscular coordination to the accuracy of the right straight punch for junior boxers. As for what the researchers assumed, there is a statistically significant correlation between sensory-motor perception and neuromuscular coordination to the accuracy of the right straight punch for junior boxers. As for the research methodology, it was a descriptive approach using the method of reciprocal relations. The research community was represented by junior boxers in Babylon Governorate. The research sample was random and its number was (32). As for the most important conclusions, the results showed that the highest percentage of contribution to the right straight punch was to the neuromuscular coordination of the hands and the lowest percentage of contribution was to the perception of distance. As for the most important conclusions, it was necessary to build sequential studies to study the effect of a number of other motor qualities and mental variables, based on their correlation with the skill of the straight punch in boxing.