Humans are lazy (or efficient!) hoppers: the importance of instructions in submaximal human hopping - podcast episode cover

Humans are lazy (or efficient!) hoppers: the importance of instructions in submaximal human hopping

Jul 16, 20229 minEp. 29
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Episode description

This paper is more than 30 years old but it is a beauty. Farley et al talk about human preferred hopping frequency and how it relates to metabolic cost and how fast muscles are contracting, and also how our instructions can influence how well people hop (and the mechanisms that drive this). Important to consider hopping instruction when assessing submaximal hopping in the clinic. 

Here's a link to the paper

Farley, C.T., Blickhan, R., Saito, J. and Taylor, C.R., 1991. Hopping frequency in humans: a test of how springs set stride frequency in bouncing gaits. Journal of applied physiology71(6), pp.2127-2132.

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Humans are lazy (or efficient!) hoppers: the importance of instructions in submaximal human hopping | Big Brain Channel podcast - Listen or read transcript on Metacast