TY - JOUR
T1 - Inter-rater reliability of a classification system for athletes with intellectual disabilities in adapted judo competitions
AU - Morales, Jose
AU - Garcia, Vanessa
AU - Fukuda, David H.
AU - Pierantozzi, Emanuela
AU - Mulroy, James
AU - Martínez-Ferrer, Josep O.
AU - Guerra-Balic, Myriam
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, the Authors. Published by Archives of Budo.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Background and Study Aim: Material and Methods: Results: Conclusions: The proliferation of adapted judo programs for people with intellectual disabilities has garnered continu-ous growth in the number of participants in this activity. As a result of this growing popularity, a number of adapted international judo competitions are now being held. The adaptive judo classification system was established to ensure that Special Needs judo athletes could be appropriately divided into categories to ensure their safety within the context of competition. The purpose of this study is knowledge about the reliability of the recently developed classification system for individuals with intellectual disabilities in adapted judo competitions. The classification system has five levels according to functional criteria. Six raters (experts) evaluated 20 vid-eos of official adapted judo competitions, corresponding to one of the five proposed classification categories. Two methods were used to quantify the degree of inter-rater agreement as to the analysis and classification of the recorded matches. Inter-rater agreement was evaluated using the Intraclass Correlation Coefficient (ICC) and Fleiss-Kappa procedures. Results indicated an excellent degree of inter-rater reliability, showing that the system produces consistent results with different raters. This study represents an important step forward in the classification level of participants in adapted judo competitions for people with intellectual disabilities. Future international adapted judo competitions would ben-efit from field studies to confirm the reliability of this classification system.
AB - Background and Study Aim: Material and Methods: Results: Conclusions: The proliferation of adapted judo programs for people with intellectual disabilities has garnered continu-ous growth in the number of participants in this activity. As a result of this growing popularity, a number of adapted international judo competitions are now being held. The adaptive judo classification system was established to ensure that Special Needs judo athletes could be appropriately divided into categories to ensure their safety within the context of competition. The purpose of this study is knowledge about the reliability of the recently developed classification system for individuals with intellectual disabilities in adapted judo competitions. The classification system has five levels according to functional criteria. Six raters (experts) evaluated 20 vid-eos of official adapted judo competitions, corresponding to one of the five proposed classification categories. Two methods were used to quantify the degree of inter-rater agreement as to the analysis and classification of the recorded matches. Inter-rater agreement was evaluated using the Intraclass Correlation Coefficient (ICC) and Fleiss-Kappa procedures. Results indicated an excellent degree of inter-rater reliability, showing that the system produces consistent results with different raters. This study represents an important step forward in the classification level of participants in adapted judo competitions for people with intellectual disabilities. Future international adapted judo competitions would ben-efit from field studies to confirm the reliability of this classification system.
KW - Autism spectrum disorder
KW - Down syndrome
KW - Paralympian
KW - Special Olympics World Games
KW - Special needs judoka
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85108584263
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14342/4768
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85108584263
SN - 1643-8698
VL - 17
SP - 119
EP - 125
JO - Archives of Budo
JF - Archives of Budo
ER -