Wood Dallas E, Swain David P
Department of the Navy, Human Performance Program, Naval Special Warfare, Virginia Beach, Virginia; and.
Department of Human Movement Sciences, Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia.
J Strength Cond Res. 2021 Nov 1;35(11):3120-3127. doi: 10.1519/JSC.0000000000003249.
Wood, DE and Swain, DP. Influence of body mass on fitness performance in Naval Special Warfare operators. J Strength Cond Res 35(11): 3120-3127, 2021-U.S. Naval Special Operations Forces have performed some of the U.S. Military's most rigorous missions. The Human Performance Program (HPP) developed a physical performance testing battery to assess and monitor physical fitness. Testing bias relative to body mass has been noted in the past literature, including military physical fitness tests. This retrospective study looked to determine whether there is body mass bias in the HPP fitness assessment and whether an optimum body mass for each fitness test could be determined. Data from 333 subjects (age: 28.4 ± 5.0 years; height: 178.4 ± 6.2 cm; mass: 86.0 ± 9.2 kg) were analyzed to compare body mass with performance on the 8 tests: standing long jump, Pro-Agility test, weighted pull-up, body weight bench press, 1 repetition maximum (1RM) deadlift, 274-m shuttle run, 4.83-km run, and 800-m swim. Linear regression analysis was used to analyze the relationship of body mass to performance; a second-degree polynomial was used to determine best-fit curves for each of the physical fitness tests; analysis of variance was used to examine differences in performance between body mass groups. Significantly better performance for lighter subjects was found in the Pro-Agility test, weighted pull-up, body weight bench press, 274-m shuttle run, and 4.83-km run. Heavier subjects performed better in the 1RM deadlift. Second-degree polynomial regression revealed optimum body mass for the Pro-Agility test, 274-m shuttle run, and 4.83-km run to be 7-16 kg heavier than the lowest body mass. These findings could help professionals better assess and train operators of varying body size.
伍德,DE和斯温,DP。体重对海军特种作战人员体能表现的影响。《力量与体能研究杂志》35(11): 3120 - 3127,2021年 - 美国海军特种作战部队执行了美国军方一些最严格的任务。人类表现计划(HPP)开发了一套体能测试组合来评估和监测身体素质。过去的文献中已指出包括军事体能测试在内,相对于体重存在测试偏差。这项回顾性研究旨在确定HPP体能评估中是否存在体重偏差,以及是否能为每项体能测试确定最佳体重。分析了333名受试者(年龄:28.4±5.0岁;身高:178.4±6.2厘米;体重:86.0±9.2千克)的数据,以比较体重与8项测试的表现:立定跳远、职业敏捷性测试、负重引体向上、自重卧推、1次最大重复量(1RM)硬拉、274米穿梭跑、4.83公里跑和800米游泳。使用线性回归分析来分析体重与表现的关系;使用二次多项式来确定每项体能测试的最佳拟合曲线;使用方差分析来检验体重组之间的表现差异。在职业敏捷性测试、负重引体向上、自重卧推、274米穿梭跑和4.83公里跑中,体重较轻的受试者表现明显更好。体重较重的受试者在1RM硬拉中表现更好。二次多项式回归显示,职业敏捷性测试、274米穿梭跑和4.83公里跑的最佳体重比最低体重重7 - 16千克。这些发现有助于专业人员更好地评估和训练不同体型的操作人员。