Females exhibited stronger average link strength and lower temporal variability within the inter-muscular network during a squat test to exhaustion compared to males.
Observational (n=38)
No
38 healthy young adults (11 males, 27 females), sport science students, age 18-30, BMI 18.5-30, regular physical activity >5 and <10 h/week.
Bodyweight squats at a regular pace (3:3 tempo) until exhaustion with simultaneous surface electromyography (sEMG) recordings.
Male vs Female comparison
Sex differences of inter-muscular network interactions and their temporal variability during a squat test.surrogate
Females exhibit stronger inter-muscular network links and lower temporal variability during exhausting squat exercises compared to males, suggesting reduced flexibility and adaptability to effort.
Male-female differences of inter-muscular coordination are crucial for personalizing rehabilitation and training interventions. This study applies a network-based approach to investigate sex differences of inter-muscular network interactions and their temporal variability during a squat test. Eleven males and twenty-seven females performed bodyweight squats at a regular pace until exhaustion, with simultaneous surface electromyography (sEMG) recordings, taken from vastus lateralis and erector spinae longissimus. The signals were decomposed into ten frequency bands. Pairwise coupling for each pair of sEMG spectral power frequency bands was quantified, and the temporal variability of the inter-muscular network was computed. Females exhibited: a) stronger average link strength within the inter-muscular network and b) lower temporal variability of the network dynamics, particularly when higher sEMG frequency bands were involved. The lower temporal variability of the inter-muscular network in females may suggest reduced flexibility and adaptability to the imposed exhausting effort compared to males. The inter-muscular coordination approach applied in this research provides a novel framework for quantifying the interactions among physiological networks and their dynamics during exercise and could play a crucial role in implementing personalized exercise and rehabilitation interventions.
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Óscar Abenza
Universitat de Barcelona
Sergi García‐Retortillo
University of Central Florida
Fidanka Vasileva
Scientific Reports
Boston University
Universitat de Barcelona
University of Central Florida
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Abenza et al. (Tue,) conducted a observational in Healthy young adults (n=38). Bodyweight squats vs. Males vs Females was evaluated on Inter-muscular network link strength and temporal variability. Females exhibited stronger average link strength and lower temporal variability within the inter-muscular network during a squat test to exhaustion compared to males.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1c048f666b677c61a91b3e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-08294-7