Association between Changes in Swimming Velocity, Vertical Center of Mass Position, and Projected Frontal Area during Maximal 200-m Front Crawl

We examined the association between changes in swimming velocity, vertical center of mass (CoM) position, and projected frontal area (PFA) during maximal 200-m front crawl. Three well-trained male swimmers performed a single maximal 200-m front crawl in an indoor 25-m pool. Three-dimensional (3D) sh...

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Main Authors: Sohei Washino, Akihiko Murai, Hirotoshi Mankyu, Yasuhide Yoshitake
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-06-01
Series:Proceedings
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2504-3900/49/1/60
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spelling doaj-2df947cedad6462194a7d6ad66d47dd82020-11-25T02:30:45ZengMDPI AGProceedings2504-39002020-06-0149606010.3390/proceedings2020049060Association between Changes in Swimming Velocity, Vertical Center of Mass Position, and Projected Frontal Area during Maximal 200-m Front CrawlSohei Washino0Akihiko Murai1Hirotoshi Mankyu2Yasuhide Yoshitake3Human Augmentation Research Center, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Kashiwa 277-0882, JapanHuman Augmentation Research Center, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Kashiwa 277-0882, JapanDepartment of Coaching of Sports and Budo, National Institute of Fitness and Sports, Kanoya 891-2393, JapanGraduate School of Science and Technology, Shinshu University, Ueda 386-8567, JapanWe examined the association between changes in swimming velocity, vertical center of mass (CoM) position, and projected frontal area (PFA) during maximal 200-m front crawl. Three well-trained male swimmers performed a single maximal 200-m front crawl in an indoor 25-m pool. Three-dimensional (3D) shape data of the whole body were fitted to 3D motion data during swimming by using inverse kinematics computation to estimate PFA accurately. Swimming velocity decreased, the vertical CoM position was lowered, and PFA increased with swimming distance. There were significant correlations between swimming velocity and vertical CoM position (|r| = 0.797–0.982) and between swimming velocity and PFA (|r| = 0.716–0.884) for each swimmer. These results suggest that descent of the swimmer’s body and increasing PFA with swimming distance are associated with decreasing swimming velocity, although the causal factor remains unclear.https://www.mdpi.com/2504-3900/49/1/60swimmingdigital human modelunderwater motion-capture systembody position
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sohei Washino
Akihiko Murai
Hirotoshi Mankyu
Yasuhide Yoshitake
spellingShingle Sohei Washino
Akihiko Murai
Hirotoshi Mankyu
Yasuhide Yoshitake
Association between Changes in Swimming Velocity, Vertical Center of Mass Position, and Projected Frontal Area during Maximal 200-m Front Crawl
Proceedings
swimming
digital human model
underwater motion-capture system
body position
author_facet Sohei Washino
Akihiko Murai
Hirotoshi Mankyu
Yasuhide Yoshitake
author_sort Sohei Washino
title Association between Changes in Swimming Velocity, Vertical Center of Mass Position, and Projected Frontal Area during Maximal 200-m Front Crawl
title_short Association between Changes in Swimming Velocity, Vertical Center of Mass Position, and Projected Frontal Area during Maximal 200-m Front Crawl
title_full Association between Changes in Swimming Velocity, Vertical Center of Mass Position, and Projected Frontal Area during Maximal 200-m Front Crawl
title_fullStr Association between Changes in Swimming Velocity, Vertical Center of Mass Position, and Projected Frontal Area during Maximal 200-m Front Crawl
title_full_unstemmed Association between Changes in Swimming Velocity, Vertical Center of Mass Position, and Projected Frontal Area during Maximal 200-m Front Crawl
title_sort association between changes in swimming velocity, vertical center of mass position, and projected frontal area during maximal 200-m front crawl
publisher MDPI AG
series Proceedings
issn 2504-3900
publishDate 2020-06-01
description We examined the association between changes in swimming velocity, vertical center of mass (CoM) position, and projected frontal area (PFA) during maximal 200-m front crawl. Three well-trained male swimmers performed a single maximal 200-m front crawl in an indoor 25-m pool. Three-dimensional (3D) shape data of the whole body were fitted to 3D motion data during swimming by using inverse kinematics computation to estimate PFA accurately. Swimming velocity decreased, the vertical CoM position was lowered, and PFA increased with swimming distance. There were significant correlations between swimming velocity and vertical CoM position (|r| = 0.797–0.982) and between swimming velocity and PFA (|r| = 0.716–0.884) for each swimmer. These results suggest that descent of the swimmer’s body and increasing PFA with swimming distance are associated with decreasing swimming velocity, although the causal factor remains unclear.
topic swimming
digital human model
underwater motion-capture system
body position
url https://www.mdpi.com/2504-3900/49/1/60
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