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人类跑步的运输成本不受宽加速/减速循环的影响,这与步行不同。

The cost of transport of human running is not affected, as in walking, by wide acceleration/deceleration cycles.

机构信息

Department of Pathophysiology and Transplantation, University of Milan, Milan, Italy.

出版信息

J Appl Physiol (1985). 2013 Feb 15;114(4):498-503. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00959.2012. Epub 2012 Dec 6.

Abstract

Although most of the literature on locomotion energetics and biomechanics is about constant-speed experiments, humans and animals tend to move at variable speeds in their daily life. This study addresses the following questions: 1) how much extra metabolic energy is associated with traveling a unit distance by adopting acceleration/deceleration cycles in walking and running, with respect to constant speed, and 2) how can biomechanics explain those metabolic findings. Ten males and ten females walked and ran at fluctuating speeds (5 ± 0, ± 1, ± 1.5, ± 2, ± 2.5 km/h for treadmill walking, 11 ± 0, ± 1, ± 2, ± 3, ± 4 km/h for treadmill and field running) in cycles lasting 6 s. Field experiments, consisting of subjects following a laser spot projected from a computer-controlled astronomic telescope, were necessary to check the noninertial bias of the oscillating-speed treadmill. Metabolic cost of transport was found to be almost constant at all speed oscillations for running and up to ±2 km/h for walking, with no remarkable differences between laboratory and field results. The substantial constancy of the metabolic cost is not explained by the predicted cost of pure acceleration/deceleration. As for walking, results from speed-oscillation running suggest that the inherent within-stride, elastic energy-free accelerations/decelerations when moving at constant speed work as a mechanical buffer for among-stride speed fluctuations, with no extra metabolic cost. Also, a recent theory about the analogy between sprint (level) running and constant-speed running on gradients, together with the mechanical determinants of gradient locomotion, helps to interpret the present findings.

摘要

虽然大多数关于运动能量学和生物力学的文献都是关于恒速实验的,但人类和动物在日常生活中往往会以变速的方式移动。本研究主要探讨以下两个问题:1)在步行和跑步中,采用加速/减速周期相对于恒速行进单位距离会增加多少额外的代谢能量,2)生物力学如何解释这些代谢发现。10 名男性和 10 名女性在跑步机上以波动速度(步行 5 ± 0、± 1、± 1.5、± 2、± 2.5 km/h,跑步 11 ± 0、± 1、± 2、± 3、± 4 km/h)进行周期性运动,持续 6 s。为了检查变速跑步机的非惯性偏差,需要进行包含受试者跟随计算机控制的天文望远镜投射的激光点的现场实验。结果发现,在所有速度波动下,跑步的运输代谢成本几乎保持不变,而在步行时,最高可达±2 km/h,实验室和现场结果之间没有显著差异。代谢成本的实质性恒定不能用纯加速/减速的预测成本来解释。至于步行,速度波动跑步的结果表明,在恒速运动时,固有步内无弹性能量的加速/减速会作为步间速度波动的机械缓冲,不会增加额外的代谢成本。此外,关于短跑(水平)跑步和梯度上恒速跑步之间的类比的最新理论,以及梯度运动的力学决定因素,有助于解释目前的发现。

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