exercise mode
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

139
(FIVE YEARS 33)

H-INDEX

21
(FIVE YEARS 2)

2022 ◽  
Vol Publish Ahead of Print ◽  
Author(s):  
Abeer M. Mahmoud ◽  
Andréa Lúcia Gonçalves da Silva ◽  
Larissa Delgado André ◽  
Chueh-Lung Hwang ◽  
Richard Severin ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 381-388
Author(s):  
Oleg Khudolii ◽  
Pavol Bartík ◽  
Dmytro Ivanov ◽  
Andrii Bezzub

The purpose of the study was to determine the peculiarities of motor skills development in boys aged 14-15. Materials and methods. The study participants were boys aged 14 (n=20) and 15 (n=20). The children and their parents were fully informed about all the features of the study and gave their consent to participate in the experiment. To solve the tasks set, the following research methods were used: study and analysis of scientific and methodological literature; pedagogical observation, timing of training tasks; pedagogical experiment, methods of mathematical statistics, discriminant analysis, nearest neighbor analysis. Results. The study made an assumption about a significant influence of the modes of alternating exercise repetitions and the rest interval on the effectiveness of motor skills development in boys aged 14 and 15. The standardized canonical discriminant function coefficients helped to determine age peculiarities and the peculiarities of influence of exercise modes on the effectiveness of motor skills development. They showed that the components of motor fitness are a priority in developing motor skills. The structure canonical discriminant function coefficients indicate the importance of movement control skills for mastering the entire exercise. Conclusions. Discriminant analysis revealed the peculiarities of motor skills development in boys aged 14 and 15, depending on age and exercise modes. With the first exercise mode, boys aged 15 master the first, second, and fourth series of training tasks more quickly. Boys aged 14 – the sixth series (exercise mode: 6 repetitions, rest interval of 60 s). With the second exercise mode, boys aged 14 master the first and fourth series of training tasks more quickly. Boys aged 15 – the second series (exercise mode: 12 repetitions, rest interval of 60 s). The coordinates of centroids for four groups indicate a significant difference in the influence of exercise repetition modes on the number of repetitions required for motor skills development in boys aged 14-15 during physical education classes. The results of group classification show that 87.5% of the original grouped cases were classified correctly.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (23) ◽  
pp. 11521
Author(s):  
Yaojung Shiao ◽  
Thang Hoang ◽  
Po-Yao Chang

Exercise is good for health, quality of life, and maintenance of human muscles. Dumbbells are popular indoor exercise equipment with several benefits such as low cost, high flexibility in space and time, easy operation, and suitability for people of all ages. Facilitated by advances in the Internet of Things, smart dumbbells that provide automatic counting and motion monitoring functions have been developed. To perform these tasks, the key process is identification of exercise mode. This study proposes a method to identify essential muscle groups’ (biceps, triceps, and deltoids) exercise modes of a dumbbell using an inertial measurement unit to provide three-axis angular velocities and accelerations. The motion angles were estimated from the axial acceleration and angular velocity. Phase diagrams and time plots of the axial angle, angular velocity, and acceleration were used to extract significant features of each exercise. Machine Learning and weighting functions were developed to combine these features into an identification index value for accurate identification and classification of the exercise modes. An algorithm was developed to verify the exercise mode identification. The results show that the proposed method and weighting function can successfully identify the six exercise modes. The identification algorithm was 99.5% accurate. The exercise mode identification of the dumbbell is confirmed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (22) ◽  
pp. 12578
Author(s):  
Daniel A. Bizjak ◽  
Martina Zügel ◽  
Gunnar Treff ◽  
Kay Winkert ◽  
Achim Jerg ◽  
...  

The aim of this study was to investigate differences in skeletal muscle gene expression of highly trained endurance and strength athletes in comparison to untrained individuals at rest and in response to either an acute bout of endurance or strength exercise. Endurance (ET, n = 8, ⩒O2max 67 ± 9 mL/kg/min) and strength athletes (ST, n = 8, 5.8 ± 3.0 training years) as well as untrained controls (E-UT and S-UT, each n = 8) performed an acute endurance or strength exercise test. One day before testing (Pre), 30 min (30′Post) and 3 h (180′Post) afterwards, a skeletal muscle biopsy was obtained from the m. vastus lateralis. Skeletal muscle mRNA was isolated and analyzed by Affymetrix-microarray technology. Pathway analyses were performed to evaluate the effects of training status (trained vs. untrained) and exercise mode-specific (ET vs. ST) transcriptional responses. Differences in global skeletal muscle gene expression between trained and untrained were smaller compared to differences in exercise mode. Maximum differences between ET and ST were found between Pre and 180′Post. Pathway analyses showed increased expression of exercise-related genes, such as nuclear transcription factors (NR4A family), metabolism and vascularization (PGC1-α and VEGF-A), and muscle growth/structure (myostatin, IRS1/2 and HIF1-α. The most upregulated genes in response to acute endurance or strength exercise were the NR4A genes (NR4A1, NR4A2, NR4A3). The mode of acute exercise had a significant effect on transcriptional regulation Pre vs. 180′Post. In contrast, the effect of training status on human skeletal muscle gene expression profiles was negligible compared to strength or endurance specialization. The highest variability in gene expression, especially for the NR4A-family, was observed in trained individuals at 180′Post. Assessment of these receptors might be suitable to obtain a deeper understanding of skeletal muscle adaptive processes to develop optimized training strategies.


Author(s):  
Andrew R. Moorea ◽  
Jasmin C. Hutchinsona ◽  
Christa R. Wintera ◽  
Paul C. Daltona ◽  
Vincent J. Paolonea

Background: Exercise power output, and resulting fatigue, is regulated based on central and peripheral sensory input. Whether exercise mode, specifically, contributes to this regulation remains unexplored. Objective: This study was designed to determine if differences in markers of fatigue would be present during two time trials of similar duration and intensity, as a result of exercise mode (cycling and rowing). Method: In a randomized crossover design, nine subjects completed the two 7-min time trials, on different days. Exercise power output, heart rate, rating of perceived exertion, and blood lactate measurements were analyzed using repeated-measures ANOVAs. Results: There was a significant interaction between mode and time for power output (p =.02), but no significant differences between matched time points were observed for any of the dependent variables used to assess fatigue (p >.05). Conclusion: Similar levels of heart rate, perceived exertion, and blood lactate for time trials on different modes, but with the same duration and directed intensity, suggest that in a laboratory environment, exercise is regulated more by physiological disturbance and sensory cues than by exercise mode. These findings support the sensory tolerance limit of exercise fatigue.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 2661
Author(s):  
Hung-Kai Chen ◽  
Fueng-Ho Chen ◽  
Shien-Fong Lin

The European Association of Preventive Cardiology Exercise Prescription in Everyday Practice and Rehabilitative Training (EXPERT) tool has been developed for digital training and decision support in cardiovascular disease patients in clinical practice. Exercise prescription recommendation systems for sub-healthy people are essential to enhance this dominant group’s physical ability as well. This study aims to construct a guided exercise prescription system for sub-healthy groups using exercise community data to train an AI model. The system consists of six modules, including three-month suggested exercise mode (3m-SEM), predicted value of rest heart rate (rest HR) difference after following three-month suggested exercise mode (3m-PV), two-month suggested exercise mode (2m-SEM), predicted value of rest HR difference after following two-month suggested exercise mode (2m-PV), one-month suggested exercise mode (1m-SEM) and predicted value of rest HR difference after following one-month suggested exercise mode (1m-PV). A new user inputs gender, height, weight, age, and current rest HR value, and the above six modules will provide the user with a prescription. A four-layer neural network model is applied to construct the above six modules. The AI-enabled model produced 95.80%, 100.00%, and 95.00% testing accuracy in 1m-SEM, 2m-SEM, and 3m-SEM, respectively. It reached 3.15, 2.89, and 2.75 BPM testing mean absolute error in 1m-PV, 2m-PV, and 3m-PV. The developed system provides quantitative exercise prescriptions to guide the sub-healthy group to engage in effective exercise programs.


Author(s):  
Evans Gleicivan Dias dos Santos ◽  
Breno Quintela Farah ◽  
Antonio Henrique Germano-Soares ◽  
Marilia de Almeida Correia ◽  
Allana Andrade Souza ◽  
...  

Life Sciences ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 265 ◽  
pp. 118786
Author(s):  
Fei Shen ◽  
Yu Zhao ◽  
Wubin Ding ◽  
Kailin Liu ◽  
Xiangyu Ren ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol Publish Ahead of Print ◽  
Author(s):  
David W. McMillan ◽  
Jennifer L. Maher ◽  
Kevin A. Jacobs ◽  
Armando J. Mendez ◽  
Mark S. Nash ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shinji Takahashi ◽  
Philip M. Grove

Background: In sports psychology research, the Stroop test and its derivations are commonly used to investigate the benefits of exercise on cognitive function. The measures of the Stroop test and the computed interference often have different interclass correlation coefficients (ICC). However, the ICC is never reported in cross-over designs involving multiple variances associated with individual differences.Objective: We investigated the ICC of the Stroop neutral and incongruent tests and interference (neutral test—incongruent test), and reverse Stroop task using the linear mixed model.Methods: Forty-eight young adults participated in a cross-over design experiment composed of 2 factors: exercise mode (walking, resistance exercise, badminton, and seated rest as control) and time (pre- and post-tests). Before and after each intervention, participants completed the Stroop neutral and incongruent, and the reverse-Stroop neutral and incongruent tests. We analyzed for each test performance and interference and calculated ICC using the linear mixed model.Results: The linear mixed model found a significant interaction of exercise mode and time for both the Stroop and reverse-Stroop tasks, suggesting that exercise mode influences the effect of acute exercise on inhibitory function. On the other hand, there was no significant effect of exercise mode for both the Stroop and reverse-Stroop interference. The results also revealed that calculating both the Stroop and reverse-Stroop interference resulted in smaller ICCs than the ICCs of the neutral and incongruent tests for both the Stroop and reverse-Stroop tasks.Conclusion: The Stroop and reverse-Stroop interferences are known as valid measures of the inhibitory function for cross-sectional research design. However, to understand the benefits of acute exercise on inhibitory function comprehensively by cross-over design, comparing the incongruent test with the neutral test also seems superior because these tests have high reliability and statistical power.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document