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Effects of acoustically paced cadence modulation on impact forces in running

Authors :
Peter J. Beek
Melvyn Roerdink
Anouk Nijs
Neuromechanics
AMS - Sports
Coordination Dynamics
Amsterdam Movement Sciences
IBBA
Source :
Nijs, A, Roerdink, M & Beek, P J 2021, ' Effects of acoustically paced cadence modulation on impact forces in running ', Gait and Posture, vol. 90, pp. 234-238 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gaitpost.2021.09.168, Gait and Posture, 90, 234-238. Elsevier
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background Increasing cadence in running has been advocated as a means to improve performance and reduce impact forces. Although acoustic pacing can be used for this purpose, it might by itself lead to an increased impact force, which would counteract the decrease in impact force that is being pursued by increasing the cadence with acoustic pacing and thus have a counterproductive effect. Research question What are the effects of acoustic pacing and cadence on peak impact force and loading rate during running? Methods Unpublished data from a previous study, in which 16 participants ran on an instrumented treadmill with various forms of acoustic pacing, were analyzed to address the research question. Peak impact force and loading rate while running with and without pacing, at three different cadences were extracted from the ground reaction force data and compared statistically between these two main conditions. In addition, we compared step-based and stride-based pacing, and paced and unpaced steps within stride-based pacing conditions. Results As expected, increasing the cadence was accompanied by a significant reduction in peak impact force and instantaneous vertical loading rate, whereas acoustic pacing had no significant effect on the impact forces compared to unpaced running with similar cadence, both before and after pacing. There were also no significant differences in this regard between step-based and stride-based pacing. Significance Acoustic pacing does not adversely affect impact force when used to increase cadence in running with the aim of reducing the impact force and can thus be used for this purpose without introducing a counterproductive effect.

Details

ISSN :
18792219 and 09666362
Volume :
90
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gaitposture
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8d9ab7765dd35c1c89da0420970774ee
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gaitpost.2021.09.168