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    Int J Sports Med. 2009 Jul;30(7):522-5. Epub 2009 May 29.

    Anthropometry as a predictor of high speed performance.

    Source

    Department of Exercise & Sport Sciences Program, University of Tulsa, 600 S. College Avenue, Tulsa, OK 74104, United States. john-caruso@utulsa.edu

    Abstract

    To assess anthropometry as a predictor of high-speed performance, subjects performed four seated knee- and hip-extension workouts with their left leg on an inertial exercise trainer (Impulse Technologies, Newnan GA). Workouts, done exclusively in either the tonic or phasic contractile mode, entailed two one-minute sets separated by a 90-second rest period and yielded three performance variables: peak force, average force and work. Subjects provided the following anthropometric data: height, weight, body mass index, as well as total, upper and lower left leg lengths. Via multiple regression, anthropometry attempted to predict the variance per performance variable. Anthropometry explained a modest (R2=0.27-0.43) yet significant degree of variance from inertial exercise trainer workouts. Anthropometry was a better predictor of peak force variance from phasic workouts, while it accounted for a significant degree of average force and work variance solely from tonic workouts. Future research should identify variables that account for the unexplained variance from high-speed exercise performance.

    PMID:
    19484698
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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