Ohio Northern University, Department of Human Performance and Sport Studies, King Horn Complex, Rm. 106B, Ada, OH 45810, USA.
Sports Med. 2013 Jul;43(7):565-74. doi: 10.1007/s40279-013-0040-2.
When discussing sports and the athletes who participate in them, it has long been recognized that fitness is a prerequisite for optimal performance. The goal of training to improve fitness levels in athletes is ultimately to minimize the stress that the body experiences during competition. When it comes to the topic of racecar drivers, however, drivers and their trainers have largely been left to their own devices to figure out the stressors and the areas of specific training focus. Unfortunately, racecar drivers have battled the stereotype that they are not athletes, and with little regard for them as athletes, drivers are seldom the focus of scientific research related to their performance. Like the cars they drive, driver-athletes are complex, but from a physiological perspective. However, unlike the cars they drive, driver-athletes have not been examined, evaluated, and tweaked to the same degree. The purpose of this review is two-fold: first, by examining the available literature, to make the case for new research into the driver's role in the driver-car system (i.e. driver science) and the stresses experienced; second, to make the case for more extensive use of microtechnology in the real-time monitoring of driver-athletes. With the miniaturization of sensors and the advent of portable data storage devices, the prospect of quantifying the stresses unique to the driver are no longer as daunting, and the relative impossibility and difficulties associated with measuring the driver-athlete in real-time no longer need to be as challenging. Using microtechnology in the assessment of the driver-athlete and with a more public discussion and dissemination of information on the topic of driver science, the scientific community has the opportunity to quantify that which has been largely assumed and speculated. The current article will offer the following recommendations: first, rather than examining a singular physiological stressor, to examine the interaction of stressors; second, to examine variables/stressors that are more representative of the changing driver demographics; third, to measure drivers in real-time during actual race events; lastly, to work to develop training programs that more accurately apply to the driver and the stresses experienced. In uncovering this information, there is an opportunity to contribute to racing becoming that much safer, that much more competitive, and that much more comprehensive for the driver, the team, and the sport.
当讨论体育和参与其中的运动员时,人们早就认识到健康是最佳表现的前提。运动员提高健康水平的训练目标最终是将身体在比赛中承受的压力降到最低。然而,当涉及到赛车手这个话题时,赛车手和他们的教练在很大程度上只能自行摸索压力源和特定训练重点。不幸的是,赛车手一直受到他们不是运动员的刻板印象的困扰,由于对他们作为运动员的关注甚少,因此很少有与他们的表现相关的科学研究关注他们。与他们驾驶的汽车一样,车手运动员是复杂的,但从生理学的角度来看。然而,与他们驾驶的汽车不同,车手运动员没有经过同样程度的检查、评估和调整。本文的目的有两个:首先,通过检查现有文献,为研究驾驶员在驾驶员-汽车系统(即驾驶员科学)中扮演的角色以及所经历的压力提供新的依据;其次,为更广泛地使用微技术实时监测车手运动员提供依据。随着传感器的微型化和便携式数据存储设备的出现,量化驾驶员特有的压力的前景不再那么令人生畏,并且与实时测量车手运动员相关的相对不可能和困难不再那么具有挑战性。在评估车手运动员时使用微技术,并更公开地讨论和传播有关驾驶员科学的信息,科学界有机会量化那些以前主要是假设和推测的内容。本文将提出以下建议:首先,不是检查单一的生理压力源,而是检查压力源的相互作用;其次,检查更能代表不断变化的驾驶员人口统计学特征的变量/压力源;第三,在实际比赛中实时测量驾驶员;最后,努力开发更准确适用于驾驶员和所经历压力的训练计划。在揭示这些信息的过程中,为赛车变得更加安全、更具竞争力和更全面提供了机会,无论是对车手、车队还是对整个运动来说都是如此。