Lecture 7 Flashcards
(15 cards)
Training represents…
The physical, technical, intellectual, and psychological preparation through physical and mental training
FITT aerobic
F – mod >5d/wk, vig >3d/wk
I – mod and/or vig
T – mod 30-60min, vig 20-60min
T – regular, purposeful ex that involves major muscle groups & is continuous & rhythmic in nature
V - >500-1000 MET/min/wk
P – one continuous session/day or multiple sessions >10min
P – gradual progression of ex vol by adjusting F I T
FITT RT
F – 2-3d/wk
I – strength 60-8-% 1RM nov-adv
T - -
T – multijoint ex’s, each major muscle group
Reps – 8-12
Sets 2-4
Pattern – 2-3min rest, 48hr b/w muscle group session
P – increase reps, sets, freq, resistance
FITT Flexibility
F – 2-3d/wk I – stretch to point of feeling tightness or slight discomfort T – min 10-30s T – static, dynamic, ballistic, pnf V – 60s total time for each ex P – repeat each ex 2-4 times
Homeostasis:
Body’s tendency to maintain balance in the presence of continual environmental variation
A dynamic state, representing the net effect of all turnover reactions *
Alarm reaction:
Shock state, source of biological stress identified by body, response to change, tries to overcome imbalance caused by stressor. Stressor persists, physical and mental performance is reduced below baseline levels.
Resistance stage:
Starts as soon as stressor is removed, body recovers from temporary imbalance and adapts at a higher level of performance to compensate for increased demands.
Exhaustion stage:
Long-continued exposure wears down body’s resistance; adaptation energy is exhausted, body doesn’t have time to adapt, Alarm reaction signs reappear
Supercompensation cycle:
Stimulus -> fatigue -> compensation -> supercompensation -> involution
Periodisation:
Structures intensity, duration, frequency of workouts, attempting to avoid overtraining, minimise injury potential, reduce training monotony, while progressing toward peak competition performance.
Methods of estimating intensity of ex:
%1RM, %VO2max, %HRmax, RPE
Training cycle ratios
Overload, reversibility, specificity, progression, individuality
Evidence of “training” effect – overload has been reduced:
Same workload produces less disturbance in homeostasis
Body able to meet same level of mechanical work with less increase in physiological demand
Specificity:
Specificity of training principle applies more so to the exercise being performed during the training i.e. mode, muscle group and energy system – but less so to the overall event/athletic performance.
*Why would cardiorespiratory response to swimming differ from running?
1 horizontal position
2 ventilation is restricted
3 external pressure is increased
4 heat conductance of water is higher than air
5 smaller muscle mass swimming (minimal postural muscle work)