keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38216709/evidence-of-second-order-transition-and-critical-scaling-for-the-dynamical-ordering-transition-in-current-driven-vortices
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
S Maegochi, K Ienaga, S Okuma
Dynamical ordering from a disordered plastic flow to an anisotropically ordered smectic flow induced by a dc force has been studied in various many-particle systems, including vortices in type-II superconductors. However, it remains unclear whether the dynamical ordering is a true phase transition because of lack of suitable experimental methods. Here, we study the response of vortex flow to the transverse force using a cross-shaped amorphous Mo[Formula: see text]Ge[Formula: see text] film. From transverse current-voltage (force-velocity) characteristics under various longitudinal currents, we find a change of the transverse response in low voltage (velocity) regions from a nonlinear to linear behavior at a well-defined longitudinal current that marks the dynamical ordering transition...
January 12, 2024: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38166455/motion-state-dependent-motor-learning-based-on-explicit-visual-feedback-has-limited-spatiotemporal-properties-compared-to-adaptation-to-physical-perturbation
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Weiwei Zhou, Emma Monsen, Kareelynn Donjuan Fernandez, Katelyn Haly, Elizabeth A Kruse, Wilsaan M Joiner
We recently showed that subjects can learn motion state-dependent changes to motor output (temporal force patterns) based on explicit visual feedback of the equivalent force-field (i.e., without the physical perturbation). Here, we examined the spatiotemporal properties of this learning compared to learning based on physical perturbations. There were two human subject groups and two experimental paradigms. One group (n=40) experienced physical perturbations (i.e., a velocity-dependent force-field, vFF) while the second (n=40) was given explicit visual feedback (EVF) of the force-velocity relationship...
January 3, 2024: Journal of Neurophysiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38126259/a-physiologically-enhanced-muscle-spindle-model-using-a-hill-type-model-for-extrafusal-fibers-as-template-for-intrafusal-fibers
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pablo F S Chacon, Maria Hammer, Isabell Wochner, Johannes R Walter, Syn Schmitt
The muscle spindle is an essential proprioceptor, significantly involved in sensing limb position and movement. Although biological spindle models exist for years, the gold-standard for motor control in biomechanics are still sensors built of homogenized spindle output models due to their simpler combination with neuro-musculoskeletal models. Aiming to improve biomechanical simulations, this work establishes a more physiological model of the muscle spindle, aligned to the advantage of easy integration into large-scale musculoskeletal models...
December 21, 2023: Computer Methods in Biomechanics and Biomedical Engineering
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38109197/cardiorespiratory-and-neuromuscular-improvements-plateau-after-two-weeks-of-sprint-interval-training-in-sedentary-individuals
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jaume Lloria-Varella, Jérôme Koral, Antoine Ravel, Juan Manuel Murias, Léonard Féasson, Thierry Busso
INTRODUCTION: Previous studies ranging from 2 to 12 weeks of sprint interval training (SIT) have reported improvements in maximal oxygen uptake (V̇O2max) and neuromuscular function in sedentary populations. However, whether the time course of the changes in these variables correlate with greater training volumes, is unclear. METHODS: 13 sedentary participants performed three all-out training weekly sessions involving 15-s sprints interspersed with 2 minutes of recovery on a cycle-ergometer...
December 13, 2023: Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38088926/eccentric-force-velocity-load-relationship-in-trained-rugby-union-athletes
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Conor McNeill, C Martyn Beaven, Daniel T McMaster, Patrick Ward, Nicholas Gill
McNeill, C, Beaven, CM, McMaster, DT, Ward, P, and Gill, N. Eccentric force-velocity-load relationship in trained rugby union athletes. J Strength Cond Res 38(3): 549-555, 2024-The force-velocity relationship is traditionally believed to resemble a hyperbolic shape, known as the "force-velocity curve." However, there is less evidence regarding this relationship during eccentric muscle action in multijoint isotonic exercise, especially in applied settings. The purpose of this study was to investigate the force-velocity-load relationship in an incremental eccentric back squat test...
March 1, 2024: Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38083365/analysing-the-contributions-of-lower-limb-muscles-to-eccentric-cycling-using-musculoskeletal-modeling-and-simulation
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stefan Venter, Paul J Stapley, Joel A Walsh, Roy Cheung, Manish Sreenivasa
Eccentric (ECC) cycling, compared to traditional concentric cycling, has been shown to improve muscle strength and neuromuscular control at a lower metabolic cost. Despite the popularity of this exercise in the sports and rehabilitation contexts, there is a gap in our knowledge of which muscles are behaving eccentrically during ECC cycling. To this end, we used a musculoskeletal model and computer simulations to calculate joint kinematics and muscle lengths during ECC cycling. Movements were recorded using 3D motion capture technology while cycling eccentrically on a custom-built semi-recumbent ergometer...
July 2023: Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38051129/the-impact-of-eccentric-or-isometric-training-on-strength-architecture-and-sprinting-across-an-australian-football-season
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ryan G Timmins, Dean Filopoulos, Jake Giannakis, Victor Nguyen, Joshua D Ruddy, Jack T Hickey, Nirav Maniar, Christopher W Pollard, Nicholas Morgan, Jonathon Weakley, David A Opar
PURPOSE: Investigate impact of an isometric (ISO) or Nordic hamstring exercise (NHE) intervention, alongside a sprint training program on hamstring strength, architecture and sprinting performance in Australian Footballers. METHODS: Twenty-five male athletes undertook NHE (n = 13) or ISO (n = 12) training across a 38-week period (including pre-season and in-season). Biceps femoris long head (BFlh) architecture, isometric and eccentric knee flexor strength were assessed at baseline, end of pre-season (14-weeks) and at the conclusion of the intervention...
November 27, 2023: Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38045747/comparing-the-effects-of-static-stretching-alone-and-in-combination-with-post-activation-performance-enhancement-on-squat-jump-performance-at-different-knee-starting-angles
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ming Li, Xiangwei Meng, Lihao Guan, Youngsuk Kim, Sukwon Kim
We aimed to investigate the impact of isolated static stretching (4 sets of 30 seconds) and its combined form with 10 repetitive drop jumps on lower limb performance during squat jumps at different knee joint starting angles (60°, 90°, and 120°). Thirteen participants completed three randomly ordered experimental visits, each including a standardized warm-up and squat jumps at three angles, apart from the intervention or control. Information was gathered through a three-dimensional movement tracking system, electromyography system, and force platform...
December 2023: Journal of Sports Science & Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38015728/the-effects-of-heavy-resisted-sled-pulling-on-sprint-mechanics-and-spatiotemporal-parameters
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ioannis Stavridis, Antonis Ekizos, Maria Zisi, Georgia-Olanemi Agilara, Charilaos Tsolakis, Gerasimos Terzis, Giorgos Paradisis
Stavridis, I, Ekizos, A, Zisi, M, Agilara, G-O, Tsolakis, C, Terzis, G, and Paradisis, G. The effects of heavy resisted sled pulling on sprint mechanics and spatiotemporal parameters. J Strength Cond Res 37(12): 2346-2353, 2023-This study examines the effects of 2 resisted sled sprinting (RSS) training programs: with a load corresponding to the running velocity associated with the apex of the individual velocity-power relationship (50%vdec), with a load equal to 10% of body mass (10% BM), and of an unresisted sprint training (URS)...
December 1, 2023: Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38006409/a-mathematical-model-for-axonal-transport-of-large-cargo-vesicles
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nizhum Rahman, Dietmar B Oelz
In this study, we consider axonal transport of large cargo vesicles characterised by transient expansion of the axon shaft. Our goal is to formulate a mathematical model which captures the dynamic mechanical interaction of such cargo vesicles with the membrane associated periodic cytoskeletal structure (MPS). It consists of regularly spaced actin rings that are transversal to the longitudinal direction of the axon and involved in the radial contraction of the axon. A system of force balance equations is formulated by which we describe the transversal rings as visco-elastic Kelvin-Voigt elements...
November 25, 2023: Journal of Mathematical Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37999437/sex-differences-in-the-load-velocity-profiles-of-three-different-row-exercises
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Raúl Nieto-Acevedo, Blanca Romero-Moraleda, Almudena Montalvo-Pérez, Carlos García-Sánchez, Moisés Marquina-Nieto, Daniel Mon-López
This study examined the force-velocity profile differences between men and women in three variations of row exercises. Twenty-eight participants (14 men and 14 women) underwent maximum dynamic strength assessments in the free prone bench row (PBR), bent-over barbell row (BBOR), and Smith machine bent-over row (SMBOR) in a randomized order. Subjects performed a progressive loading test from 30 to 100% of 1-RM (repetition maximum), and the mean propulsive velocity was measured in all attempts. Linear regression analyses were conducted to establish the relationships between the different measures of bar velocity and % 1-RM...
November 9, 2023: Sports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37987496/maturity-offset-anthropometric-characteristics-and-vertical-force-velocity-profile-in-youth-basketball-players
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pablo Jiménez-Daza, Luis Teba Del Pino, Julio Calleja-Gonzalez, Eduardo Sáez de Villarreal
This work aimed to analyze the relationships between maturity offset, anthropometric variables and the vertical force-velocity profile in youth (12-18 years old) male basketball players. The vertical force-velocity profile was measured in 49 basketball players, grouped in competitive-age categories, i.e., under 14, 16 and 18 years of age (U-14, U-16 and U-18, respectively). A bivariate correlational analysis was carried out between maturity offset, anthropometric variables (height, body mass, % fat, muscle mass, bone mass and body mass index (BMI)) and vertical force-velocity profile (theoretical maximal force [F0], theoretical maximal velocity [V0], theoretical maximal power [Pmax], force-velocity imbalance [Fvimb] and force-velocity profile orientation)...
November 17, 2023: Journal of Functional Morphology and Kinesiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37987487/force-velocity-relationship-in-cycling-and-arm-cranking-a-comparison-of-men-and-women
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jan Heller, Ivana Kinkorova, Pavel Vodicka, Pantelis Theodoros Nikolaidis, Stefan Balko
This study was aimed at comparing the force-velocity relationship during cycling and arm cranking in males and females. Thirty-two male and twenty-two female healthy volunteers performed a force-velocity test on a cycle ergometer and a cranking ergometer in a randomly selected order. The theoretical values of the maximum force at zero speed (F0 ) and the maximum velocity at zero braking force (v0 ) for the lower and upper limbs were determined, and the maximum anaerobic power (Pmax) was calculated from the individual force-velocity relationship...
October 30, 2023: Journal of Functional Morphology and Kinesiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37953595/the-evolution-of-hand-proprioceptive-and-motor-impairments-in-the-sub-acute-phase-after-stroke
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Monika Zbytniewska-Mégret, Christian Salzmann, Christoph M Kanzler, Thomas Hassa, Roger Gassert, Olivier Lambercy, Joachim Liepert
BACKGROUND: Hand proprioception is essential for fine movements and therefore many activities of daily living. Although frequently impaired after stroke, it is unclear how hand proprioception evolves in the sub-acute phase and whether it follows a similar pattern of changes as motor impairments. OBJECTIVE: This work investigates whether there is a corresponding pattern of changes over time in hand proprioception and motor function as comprehensively quantified by a combination of robotic, clinical, and neurophysiological assessments...
November 13, 2023: Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37947256/emergence-of-diverse-patterns-driven-by-molecular-motors-in-the-motility-assay
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brandon Slater, Wonyeong Jung, Taeyoon Kim
Actomyosin contractility originating from interactions between F-actin and myosin motors in the actin cytoskeleton generates mechanical forces and drives a wide range of cellular processes including cell migration and cytokinesis. To probe the interactions between F-actin and myosin motors, the myosin motility assay has been popularly employed, which consists of myosin heads attached to a glass surface and F-actins gliding on the surface via interactions with the heads. Several experiments have shown that F-actins move in a collective fashion due to volume-exclusion effects between neighboring F-actins...
November 10, 2023: Cytoskeleton
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37917965/four-sessions-of-repeated-sprint-cycling-training-with-or-without-severe-hypoxia-do-not-modify-overground-running-sprint-force-velocity-profile
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Franck Brocherie, Sebastien Racinais, Anthony Couderc, Julien Piscione, Olivier Girard
PURPOSE: To investigate the effect of cycling-based repeated-sprint training in hypoxia versus in normoxia on single overground running sprint performance and associated force-velocity (F-V) profile in world-class female rugby sevens players. METHODS: Eighteen world-class female rugby sevens players were randomly assigned to repeated-sprint cycling training in normobaric hypoxia (n = 9) or normoxia (n = 9) groups. Training consisted of 4 sessions of repeated-sprint cycling training in normobaric hypoxia or in normoxia (4 × 5 × 5-s cycle sprints-25-s intersprint recovery performed in simulated altitude of ∼5000 m or in normoxia with 3-min interset rest in normoxia for both groups) in addition to rugby sevens training and strength and conditioning sessions within a 9-day intervention period before an international competition...
October 10, 2023: International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37917955/the-force-velocity-profiling-concept-for-sprint-running-is-a-dead-end
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gertjan Ettema
PURPOSE: In this commentary, I present arguments against the use of the force-velocity profiling concept in design and adaptations of training programs targeting sprinting. The purpose of this commentary is to make sports practitioners more aware of the rationale behind the concept and explain why it does not work. RATIONALE: Force-velocity profiling is a mathematical way to present the velocity development during sprint behavior. Some details of this behavior may be accentuated by transforming it to other variables, but it does not add any new information about sprint performance...
January 1, 2024: International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37916271/the-effect-of-low-frequency-fatigue-on-the-torque-velocity-relationship-in-human-quadriceps
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jon Herskind, Anders Gravholt, Lars G Hvid, Kristian Overgaard
Low-frequency fatigue (LFF) is usually defined as the decline in low:high-frequency force of electrically evoked isometric muscle contractions. The influence of LFF on dynamic muscle function is not well known. Our aim was to establish a method for assessing LFF using both isometric and concentric muscle contractions using electrical stimulation at different frequencies in humans. Sixteen participants underwent a series of electrically evoked knee extensions in an isokinetic dynamometer to establish torque-velocity relationships at 15 and 50 Hz...
November 2, 2023: Journal of Applied Physiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37905058/linking-in-vivo-muscle-dynamics-to-in-situ-force-length-and-force-velocity-reveals-that-guinea-fowl-lateral-gastrocnemius-operates-at-shorter-than-optimal-lengths
#39
M J Schwaner, D L Mayfield, E Azizi, M A Daley
Force-length (F-L) and force-velocity (F-V) properties characterize skeletal muscle's intrinsic properties under controlled conditions, and it is thought that these properties can inform and predict in vivo muscle function. Here, we map dynamic in vivo operating range and mechanical function during walking and running, to the measured in situ F-L and F-V characteristics of guinea fowl ( Numida meleagris ) lateral gastrocnemius (LG), a primary ankle extensor. We use in vivo patterns of muscle tendon force, fascicle length, and activation to test the hypothesis that muscle fascicles operate at optimal lengths and velocities to maximize force or power production during walking and running...
October 16, 2023: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37901934/speed-specific-optimal-contractile-conditions-of-the-human-soleus-muscle-from-slow-to-maximum-running-speed
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sebastian Bohm, Falk Mersmann, Arno Schroll, Adamantios Arampatzis
The soleus is the main muscle for propulsion during human running but its operating behavior across the spectrum of physiological running speeds is currently unknown. This study investigated experimentally the soleus muscle activation patterns and contractile conditions for force generation, power production and efficient work production (i.e. force-length potential, force-velocity potential, power-velocity potential and enthalpy efficiency) at seven running speeds (3.0 m s-1 to individual maximum). During submaximal running (3...
October 30, 2023: Journal of Experimental Biology
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