Wearing an accelerometer on the shank provided the strongest correlations (r = 0.604–0.793) with percentage of heart rate reserve across running, basketball, and badminton.
Cross-Sectional (n=14)
Does the position of accelerometers and choice of intensity metrics accurately reflect heart rate reserve during different types of sports?
The shank is the optimal sensor position for acceleration-based intensity metrics to monitor external exercise intensity across various sports.
Effect estimate: r = 0.604-0.793 (shank)
This study quantified the strength of the relationship between the percentage of heart rate reserve (%HRR) and two acceleration-based intensity metrics (AIMs) at three sensor-positions during three sport types (running, basketball, and badminton) under three intensity conditions (locomotion speeds). Fourteen participants (age: 24.9 ± 2.4 years) wore a chest strap HR monitor and placed three accelerometers at the left wrist (non-dominant), trunk, and right shank, respectively. The %HRR and two different AIMs (Player Load per minute PL/min and mean amplitude deviation MAD) during exercise were calculated. During running, both AIMs at the shank and PL at the wrist had strong correlations (r = 0.777–0.778) with %HRR; while other combinations were negligible to moderate (r = 0.065–0.451). For basketball, both AIMs at the shank had stronger correlations (r = 0.604–0.628) with %HRR than at wrist (r = 0.536–0.603) and trunk (r = 0.403–0.463) with %HRR. During badminton exercise, both AIMs at shank had stronger correlations (r = 0.782–0.793) with %HRR than those at wrist (r = 0.587–0.621) and MAD at trunk (r = 0.608) and trunk (r = 0.314). Wearing the sensor on the shank is an ideal position for both AIMs to monitor external intensity in running, basketball, and badminton, while the wrist and using PL-derived AIM seems to be the second ideal combination.
Chen et al. (Mon,) conducted a cross-sectional in Healthy participants (sports exercise) (n=14). Acceleration-based intensity metrics (AIMs) at different sensor positions vs. Percentage of heart rate reserve (%HRR) was evaluated on Correlation between percentage of heart rate reserve (%HRR) and acceleration-based intensity metrics (AIMs) (r = 0.604-0.793 (shank)). Wearing an accelerometer on the shank provided the strongest correlations (r = 0.604–0.793) with percentage of heart rate reserve across running, basketball, and badminton.
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