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Heart rate recovery in decision support for high performance athlete training schedules

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posted on 2025-05-09, 10:29 authored by David J. Cornforth, Dean J. Robinson, Ian Spence, Herbert F. Jelinek
This work investigated the suitability of a new tool for decision support in training programs of high performance athletes. The aim of this study was to find a reliable and robust measure of the fitness of an athlete for use as a tool for adjusting training schedules. We examined the use of heart rate recovery percentage (HRr%) for this purpose, using a two-phased approach. Phase 1 consisted of testing the suitability of HRr% as a measure of aerobic fitness, using a modified running test specifically designed for high performance team running sports such as football. Phase 2 was conducted over a 12-week training program with two different training loads. HRr% measured aerobic fitness and a running time-trial measured performance. Consecutive measures of HRr% during phase 1 indicated a Pearson's r of 0.92, suggesting a robust measure of aerobic fitness. During phase 2, HRr% reflected the training load and significantly increased when the training load was reduced between weeks 4 to 5. This work shows that HRr% is a robust indicator of aerobic fitness and provides an on-the-spot index that is useful for training load adjustment of elite performance athletes.

History

Journal title

Interdisciplinary Journal of Information, Knowledge, and Management

Volume

9

Pagination

194-207

Publisher

Informing Science Institute

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Science and Information Technology

School

School of Design, Communication and Information Technology

Rights statement

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