Scott Macfarlane T U, Scott Tannath J, Kelly Vincent G
1The School of Human Movement and Nutrition Sciences, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia; 2Performance Sciences Department, Brisbane Broncos Rugby League Club, Brisbane, Australia; and 3Applied Sport Science and Exercise Testing Laboratory, Faculty of Science and Information Technology, University of Newcastle, Ourimbah, Australia.
J Strength Cond Res. 2016 May;30(5):1470-90. doi: 10.1519/JSC.0000000000001221.
The use of global positioning systems (GPS) has increased dramatically over the last decade. Using signals from orbiting satellites, the GPS receiver calculates the exact position of the device and the speed at which the device is moving. Within team sports GPS devices are used to quantify the external load experienced by an athlete, allowing coaches to better manage trainings loads and potentially identify athletes who are overreaching or overtraining. This review aims to collate all studies that have tested either (or both) the validity or reliability of GPS devices in a team sport setting, with a particular focus on (a) measurements of distance, speed, velocities, and accelerations across all sampling rates and (b) accelerometers, player/body load and impacts in accelerometer-integrated GPS devices. A comprehensive search of the online libraries identified 22 articles that fit search criteria. The literature suggests that all GPS units, regardless of sampling rate, are capable of tracking athlete's distance during team sport movements with adequate intraunit reliability. One Hertz and 5Hz GPS units have limitations in their reporting of distance during high-intensity running, velocity measures, and short linear running (particularly those involving changes of direction), although these limitations seem to be overcome during measures recorded during team sport movements. Ten Hertz GPS devices seem the most valid and reliable to date across linear and team sport simulated running, overcoming many limitations of earlier models, whereas the increase to 15Hz GPS devices have had no additional benefit.
在过去十年中,全球定位系统(GPS)的使用急剧增加。GPS接收器利用来自轨道卫星的信号计算设备的确切位置以及设备移动的速度。在团队运动中,GPS设备用于量化运动员所承受的外部负荷,使教练能够更好地管理训练负荷,并有可能识别出过度训练或训练过度的运动员。本综述旨在整理所有在团队运动环境中测试过GPS设备有效性或可靠性(或两者皆测试过)的研究,特别关注(a)在所有采样率下对距离、速度、速率和加速度的测量,以及(b)加速度计、加速度计集成GPS设备中的运动员/身体负荷和撞击。对在线图书馆进行全面搜索后,确定了22篇符合搜索标准的文章。文献表明,所有GPS设备,无论采样率如何,都能够在团队运动中以足够的设备内部可靠性跟踪运动员的距离。1赫兹和5赫兹的GPS设备在高强度跑步、速度测量和短距离直线跑步(特别是那些涉及方向变化的跑步)过程中的距离报告存在局限性,不过在团队运动记录的测量过程中这些局限性似乎可以克服。到目前为止,10赫兹的GPS设备在线性和团队运动模拟跑步方面似乎是最有效和可靠的,克服了早期型号的许多局限性,而增加到15赫兹的GPS设备并没有带来额外的好处。