Metabolic power method underestimates energy expenditure in field sport movements using a GPS tracking system


Autoria(s): Brown, Darcy M.; Dwyer, Dan B.; Robertson, Samuel J.; Gastin, Paul B.
Data(s)

01/01/2016

Resumo

The purpose of this study was to assess the validity of a GPS tracking system to estimate energy expenditure (EE) during exercise and field sport locomotor movements. Twenty-seven participants each completed one 90 minute exercise session on an outdoor synthetic futsal pitch. During the exercise session participants wore a 5 Hz GPS unit interpolated to 15 Hz (SPI HPU, GPSports Pty Ltd, Australia) and a portable gas analyser (Metamax® 3B, Cortex Pty Ltd, Germany) which acted as the criterion measure of EE. The exercise session was comprised of alternating five minute exercise bouts of randomised walking, jogging, running or a field sport circuit (x3) followed by 10 minutes of recovery. One-way ANOVA showed significant (p<0.01) and very large underestimations between GPS metabolic power derived EE and VO2 derived EE for all field sport circuits (% difference ≈ -44%). No differences in EE were observed for the jog (7.8%) and run (4.8%) while very large overestimations were found for the walk (43.0%). The GPS metabolic power EE over the entire 90 minute session was significantly lower (p<0.01) than the VO2 EE, resulting in a moderate underestimation overall (-19%). The results of this study suggest that a GPS tracking system using the metabolic power model of EE does not accurately estimate EE in field sport movements or over an exercise session consisting of mixed locomotor activities interspersed with recovery periods; however is able to provide a reasonably accurate estimation of EE during continuous jogging and running.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30083299

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Human Kinetics

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30083299/gastin-metabolicpower-pre-2016.pdf

http://www.dx.doi.org/10.1123/ijspp.2016-0021

Direitos

2016, Human Kinetics

Palavras-Chave #criterion validity #intermittent exercise #excess post-exercise oxygen consumption #energy cost #time-motion analysis
Tipo

Journal Article