Back to Search Start Over

A comparison of manual and automatic force-onset identification methodologies and their effect on force-time characteristics in the isometric midthigh pull

Authors :
Guppy, Stuart N.
Brady, Claire J.
Kotani, Yosuke
Connolly, Shannon
Comfort, Paul
Lake, Jason P.
Haff, G. Gregory
Guppy, Stuart N.
Brady, Claire J.
Kotani, Yosuke
Connolly, Shannon
Comfort, Paul
Lake, Jason P.
Haff, G. Gregory
Source :
Research outputs 2014 to 2021
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The aim of this study was to assess the agreement of three different automated methods of identifying force-onset (40 N, 5 SDs, and 3 SDs) with manual identification, during the isometric mid-thigh pull (IMTP). Fourteen resistance-trained participants with > 6 months experience training with the power clean volunteered to take part. After three familiarisation sessions, the participants performed five maximal IMTPs separated by 1 min of rest. Fixed bias was found between 40 N and manual identification for time at force-onset. No proportional bias was present between manual identification and any automated threshold. Fixed bias between manual identification and automated was present for force at onset and F150. Proportional but not fixed bias was found for F50 between manual identification and all automated thresholds. Small to moderate differences (Hedges g = −0.487- −0.692) were found for F90 between all automated thresholds and manual identification, while trivial to small differences (Hedges g = −0.122—−0.279) were found between methods for F200 and F250. Based on these results, strength and conditioning practitioners should not use a 40 N, 5 SDs, or 3 SDs threshold interchangeably with manual identification of force-onset when analysing IMTP force–time curve data.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Research outputs 2014 to 2021
Notes :
application/pdf, Research outputs 2014 to 2021
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1333621606
Document Type :
Electronic Resource