Impact of imposed stroke rate on repeated sprint swimming ability and perceptual cognitive load: effect of expertise and deficiency
INTRODUCTION
High level of motor flexibility, illustrated by stroke rate (SR) changes during competitive event, may explain the swimming performance (Seifert et al. 2014). The study aimed to determine whether the SR imposition could impact performance and perceptual cognitive load (PCL) in higher and lower proficiency swimmers and para-swimmers.
METHOD
26 swimmers and 9 para-swimmers (20.4±4.3y, 177.6±9.1cm, 68.1±8.8kg) performed 50m sprint in their speciality at their freely-chosen SR (FC) and at the imposed mean SR, based on the averaged FC. Then all the subjects randomly swam 4 ´ 50m at SR-6, SR-3, SR+3 and SR+6, separated by 7-min of passive recovery. SR was imposed by a Tempo trainer (Finis Inc, Livermore, USA) (Altavilla et al. 2018). Perceptual cognitive load was measured by visual analogic scale, 3-min after each 50m.
RESULTS
All the swimmers were significantly faster during FC compared other conditions (p 0.008). Performance during mean SR was higher than SR-6 (p 0.020). SR+3 and SR+6 conditions induced a significant higher perceptual cognitive load value compared to FC trial (p 0.001). Logistic regression showed that the ability to repeat the same level of swimming performance (i.e., < 5% changes with FC condition), was related to proficiency (p 0.002), the ability to swim quickly at the lowest (SR-6) and highest (SR+6) imposed SR (p 0.022), disability (p 0.023) and swimming speed (p 0.038). No relation was found between the repeated sprint ability and the perceptual cognitive load (p 0.671).
DISCUSSON
Higher proficiency able-bodied swimmers seem to be able to use a large SR range to perform.
© Copyright 2023 XIVth International Symposium on Biomechanics and Medicine in Swimming Proceedings. Published by evoletics Media. All rights reserved.
| Subjects: | |
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| Notationen: | technical and natural sciences endurance sports sports for the handicapped |
| Published in: | XIVth International Symposium on Biomechanics and Medicine in Swimming Proceedings |
| Format: | Compilation Article |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
Leipzig
evoletics Media
2023
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| Online Access: | https://open-archive.sport-iat.de/bms/14_104_Lepretre_Impact.pdf |
| Seiten: | 1 |
| Level: | advanced |