University of Oregon Athletics Department, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon.
School of Exercise Science, Australian Catholic University, Strathfield, New South Wales, Australia.
J Strength Cond Res. 2019 Jun;33(6):1463-1466. doi: 10.1519/JSC.0000000000003157.
Delaney, JA, Wileman, TM, Perry, NJ, Thornton, HR, Moresi, MP, and Duthie, GM. The validity of a global navigation satellite system for quantifying small-area team-sport movements. J Strength Cond Res 33(6): 1463-1466, 2019-The recent development of global navigation satellite systems (GNSS) has improved the availability and signal strength of surrounding satellites compared with traditional global positioning systems, although their ability to quantify rapid changes in speed may still be limited. This study aimed to evaluate the validity of GNSS to quantify the mean speed (m·s) and acceleration (m·s) of movements typical to team sports. One participant completed 9 periods of 4 minutes of activity, separated by 2-minute rest periods, which involved walking, jogging, and running in a variety of directions and patterns, aimed to simulate a team-sport movement profile. Speed and acceleration were quantified from a 10-Hz GNSS unit and compared with a 10-camera, 3-dimensional motion capture system (VICON), from which the movement of both the participant's center of mass (COM) and the location of the GNSS unit (e.g., C7 vertebrae) were calculated. Practical estimates of speed were associated with small differences from both the criterion COM (effect size; ±90% confidence limits = 0.19-0.25; ± ∼0.21) and criterion C7 (0.14-0.22; ± ∼0.13). The corresponding estimates of acceleration derived from raw data were classified as small (0.16-0.22; ± ∼0.15) and small to moderate (0.25-0.35; ± ∼0.24) for the COM and C7, respectively. Software-exported acceleration values exhibited very large mean bias compared with both criterion measures (-3.81 to -3.77; ± ∼0.24). This study demonstrates that 10-Hz GNSS possess acceptable validity for assessing the average demands of movements typical of team-sports training and competition, although caution is recommended when using software-exported measures of acceleration.
德莱尼、JA、怀尔曼、TM、佩里、NJ、桑顿、HR、莫雷西、MP 和杜西、GM。全球导航卫星系统对小区域团队运动运动的定量的有效性。J 强质研 33(6):1463-1466,2019-全球导航卫星系统(GNSS)的最新发展提高了周围卫星的可用性和信号强度与传统的全球定位系统相比,虽然他们的能力来量化速度的快速变化可能仍然是有限的。本研究旨在评估 GNSS 来量化的平均速度(米/秒)和加速度(米/秒)的典型运动的团队运动。一个参与者完成了 9 个 4 分钟的活动周期,每个周期之间间隔 2 分钟的休息时间,活动包括各种方向和模式的步行、慢跑和跑步,旨在模拟团队运动的运动模式。速度和加速度从 10-Hz GNSS 单元量化,并与 10 个摄像头、3 维运动捕捉系统(VICON)进行比较,从该运动的参与者的质心(COM)和 GNSS 单元的位置(如 C7 椎骨)进行计算。速度的实际估计与从标准 COM(效应大小;±90%置信限=0.19-0.25;±∼0.21)和标准 C7(0.14-0.22;±∼0.13)的小差异相关。从原始数据中得出的加速度的相应估计被分类为小(0.16-0.22;±∼0.15)和小到中等(0.25-0.35;±∼0.24),分别为 COM 和 C7。与两个标准测量值相比,软件导出的加速度值表现出非常大的平均偏差(-3.81 至-3.77;±∼0.24)。本研究表明,10-Hz GNSS 具有评估团队运动训练和比赛中典型运动的平均需求的可接受的有效性,尽管在使用软件导出的加速度测量值时需要谨慎。