• Arm movement and running speed: Is the p

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Wed Apr 20 22:30:48 2022
    Arm movement and running speed: Is the partnership overrated?

    Date:
    April 20, 2022
    Source:
    Southern Methodist University
    Summary:
    New research into human speed suggests that athletes who performed
    short sprints with their arms closed across their chests were
    nearly as fast as when they sprinted with their normal arm swing.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    New research into human speed from a team at SMU (Southern Methodist University,) and West Chester University suggests that athletes who
    performed short sprints with their arms closed across their chests were
    nearly as fast as when they sprinted with their normal arm swing.


    ==========================================================================
    The findings, published in the journal Gait & Posture, offer additional fundamental insights regarding limb synchronization during sprint
    performance.

    "Our findings suggest the classic view that arm swing directly drives leg motion to affect performance is not well-supported," said Peter Weyand,
    an expert in human speed who leads SMU's Locomotor Performance Lab.

    The coauthors of the research are lead author Lance C. Brooks, a doctoral student studying with Weyand in the Department of Applied Physiology & Wellness; Weyand, who is Glenn Simmons Endowed Professor of Applied
    Physiology and Biomechanics in the Department of Applied Physiology
    & Wellness in SMU's Annette Caldwell Simmons School of Education &
    Human Development; and Kenneth P. Clark, an associate professor in the Department of Kinesiology at West Chester University. Brooks previously
    studied under Clark at West Chester University as he completed his
    master's degree in exercise science and biomechanics.

    The study examined the velocity of participants first sprinting 30 meters
    with regular arm motion, then again with restricted arm motion. When
    study participants sprinted with restricted arm motion, their 30-meter
    sprint time slowed down by only 0.08 seconds on average, a 1.6 percent difference from when the participants sprinted while moving their arms.

    "We were surprised by the small magnitude of difference between the
    two experimental conditions. It is generally believed that the arms substantially influence the movement of the legs, and therefore running
    speed, which clearly is not the case," Brooks said.

    "When the athletes sprinted with restricted arm swing, the torso
    rotated back and forth appreciably more than normal to counterbalance
    the swinging legs," Brooks added. "We believe that this extra torso
    rotation effectively compensated for arm swing to help maintain the body's forward-facing orientation and the overall mechanics needed for speed."
    The study's results strongly suggest that human runners use arm motion to prevent the body from rotating away from its forward-facing orientation.

    "The compensatory torso twisting movements we observed during arm motion restriction indicate that runners swing their arms as the simplest
    and most natural strategy to prevent undesirable bodily rotations,"
    Clark said.

    Do the team's findings mean we will see less arm-swinging among sprinters
    in competitive sprinting? Probably not, as the difference in timed results
    is often razor-thin in timed competitions. The researchers point to the
    results of the 2020 Olympics Men's 100-meter final, where the difference between the Gold and Bronze medal was only 0.09 seconds.

    But the study's findings are still an important step toward better understanding the influence of arm rotation on sprint performance.

    "Virtually all runners choose to swing their arms to maintain a
    forward-facing position," Weyand said. "The classic studies on the
    'why' of arm motion during human locomotion are 40 or more years old
    and focused primarily on walking and jogging. So, performance effects
    were largely unknown," he said.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by Southern_Methodist_University. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Related Multimedia:
    * Starting_positions_and_arm_positions_when_running ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Lance C. Brooks, Peter G. Weyand, Kenneth P. Clark. Does restricting
    arm
    motion compromise short sprint running performance? Gait & Posture,
    2022; 94: 114 DOI: 10.1016/j.gaitpost.2022.03.001 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/04/220420133535.htm

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