The reliability of vertical jump tests between the Vertec and My Jump phone application

Background The vertical jump is used to estimate sports performance capabilities and physical fitness in children, elderly, non-athletic and injured individuals. Different jump techniques and measurement tools are available to assess vertical jump height and peak power; however, their use is limited...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vanessa R. Yingling, Dimitri A. Castro, Justin T. Duong, Fiorella J. Malpartida, Justin R. Usher, Jenny O
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2018-04-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
ICC
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/4669.pdf
id doaj-7b6e68e124d14fc7acb539199bce8e6f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7b6e68e124d14fc7acb539199bce8e6f2020-11-24T22:55:10ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592018-04-016e466910.7717/peerj.4669The reliability of vertical jump tests between the Vertec and My Jump phone applicationVanessa R. YinglingDimitri A. CastroJustin T. DuongFiorella J. MalpartidaJustin R. UsherJenny OBackground The vertical jump is used to estimate sports performance capabilities and physical fitness in children, elderly, non-athletic and injured individuals. Different jump techniques and measurement tools are available to assess vertical jump height and peak power; however, their use is limited by access to laboratory settings, excessive cost and/or time constraints thus making these tools oftentimes unsuitable for field assessment. A popular field test uses the Vertec and the Sargent vertical jump with countermovement; however, new low cost, easy to use tools are becoming available, including the My Jump iOS mobile application (app). The purpose of this study was to assess the reliability of the My Jump relative to values obtained by the Vertec for the Sargent stand and reach vertical jump (VJ) test. Methods One hundred and thirty-five healthy participants aged 18–39 years (94 males, 41 females) completed three maximal Sargent VJ with countermovement that were simultaneously measured using the Vertec and the My Jump. Jump heights were quantified for each jump and peak power was calculated using the Sayers equation. Four separate ICC estimates and their 95% confidence intervals were used to assess reliability. Two analyses (with jump height and calculated peak power as the dependent variables, respectively) were based on a single rater, consistency, two-way mixed-effects model, while two others (with jump height and calculated peak power as the dependent variables, respectively) were based on a single rater, absolute agreement, two-way mixed-effects model. Results Moderate to excellent reliability relative to the degree of consistency between the Vertec and My Jump values was found for jump height (ICC = 0.813; 95% CI [0.747–0.863]) and calculated peak power (ICC = 0.926; 95% CI [0.897–0.947]). However, poor to good reliability relative to absolute agreement for VJ height (ICC = 0.665; 95% CI [0.050–0.859]) and poor to excellent reliability relative to absolute agreement for peak power (ICC = 0.851; 95% CI [0.272–0.946]) between the Vertec and My Jump values were found; Vertec VJ height, and thus, Vertec calculated peak power values, were significantly higher than those calculated from My Jump values (p < 0.0001). Discussion The My Jump app may provide a reliable measure of vertical jump height and calculated peak power in multiple field and laboratory settings without the need of costly equipment such as force plates or Vertec. The reliability relative to degree of consistency between the Vertec and My Jump app was moderate to excellent. However, the reliability relative to absolute agreement between Vertec and My Jump values contained significant variation (based on CI values), thus, it is recommended that either the My Jump or the Vertec be used to assess VJ height in repeated measures within subjects’ designs; these measurement tools should not be considered interchangeable within subjects or in group measurement designs.https://peerj.com/articles/4669.pdfVertical jump heightPeak powerReliabilityMy JumpVertecICC
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vanessa R. Yingling
Dimitri A. Castro
Justin T. Duong
Fiorella J. Malpartida
Justin R. Usher
Jenny O
spellingShingle Vanessa R. Yingling
Dimitri A. Castro
Justin T. Duong
Fiorella J. Malpartida
Justin R. Usher
Jenny O
The reliability of vertical jump tests between the Vertec and My Jump phone application
PeerJ
Vertical jump height
Peak power
Reliability
My Jump
Vertec
ICC
author_facet Vanessa R. Yingling
Dimitri A. Castro
Justin T. Duong
Fiorella J. Malpartida
Justin R. Usher
Jenny O
author_sort Vanessa R. Yingling
title The reliability of vertical jump tests between the Vertec and My Jump phone application
title_short The reliability of vertical jump tests between the Vertec and My Jump phone application
title_full The reliability of vertical jump tests between the Vertec and My Jump phone application
title_fullStr The reliability of vertical jump tests between the Vertec and My Jump phone application
title_full_unstemmed The reliability of vertical jump tests between the Vertec and My Jump phone application
title_sort reliability of vertical jump tests between the vertec and my jump phone application
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2018-04-01
description Background The vertical jump is used to estimate sports performance capabilities and physical fitness in children, elderly, non-athletic and injured individuals. Different jump techniques and measurement tools are available to assess vertical jump height and peak power; however, their use is limited by access to laboratory settings, excessive cost and/or time constraints thus making these tools oftentimes unsuitable for field assessment. A popular field test uses the Vertec and the Sargent vertical jump with countermovement; however, new low cost, easy to use tools are becoming available, including the My Jump iOS mobile application (app). The purpose of this study was to assess the reliability of the My Jump relative to values obtained by the Vertec for the Sargent stand and reach vertical jump (VJ) test. Methods One hundred and thirty-five healthy participants aged 18–39 years (94 males, 41 females) completed three maximal Sargent VJ with countermovement that were simultaneously measured using the Vertec and the My Jump. Jump heights were quantified for each jump and peak power was calculated using the Sayers equation. Four separate ICC estimates and their 95% confidence intervals were used to assess reliability. Two analyses (with jump height and calculated peak power as the dependent variables, respectively) were based on a single rater, consistency, two-way mixed-effects model, while two others (with jump height and calculated peak power as the dependent variables, respectively) were based on a single rater, absolute agreement, two-way mixed-effects model. Results Moderate to excellent reliability relative to the degree of consistency between the Vertec and My Jump values was found for jump height (ICC = 0.813; 95% CI [0.747–0.863]) and calculated peak power (ICC = 0.926; 95% CI [0.897–0.947]). However, poor to good reliability relative to absolute agreement for VJ height (ICC = 0.665; 95% CI [0.050–0.859]) and poor to excellent reliability relative to absolute agreement for peak power (ICC = 0.851; 95% CI [0.272–0.946]) between the Vertec and My Jump values were found; Vertec VJ height, and thus, Vertec calculated peak power values, were significantly higher than those calculated from My Jump values (p < 0.0001). Discussion The My Jump app may provide a reliable measure of vertical jump height and calculated peak power in multiple field and laboratory settings without the need of costly equipment such as force plates or Vertec. The reliability relative to degree of consistency between the Vertec and My Jump app was moderate to excellent. However, the reliability relative to absolute agreement between Vertec and My Jump values contained significant variation (based on CI values), thus, it is recommended that either the My Jump or the Vertec be used to assess VJ height in repeated measures within subjects’ designs; these measurement tools should not be considered interchangeable within subjects or in group measurement designs.
topic Vertical jump height
Peak power
Reliability
My Jump
Vertec
ICC
url https://peerj.com/articles/4669.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT vanessaryingling thereliabilityofverticaljumptestsbetweenthevertecandmyjumpphoneapplication
AT dimitriacastro thereliabilityofverticaljumptestsbetweenthevertecandmyjumpphoneapplication
AT justintduong thereliabilityofverticaljumptestsbetweenthevertecandmyjumpphoneapplication
AT fiorellajmalpartida thereliabilityofverticaljumptestsbetweenthevertecandmyjumpphoneapplication
AT justinrusher thereliabilityofverticaljumptestsbetweenthevertecandmyjumpphoneapplication
AT jennyo thereliabilityofverticaljumptestsbetweenthevertecandmyjumpphoneapplication
AT vanessaryingling reliabilityofverticaljumptestsbetweenthevertecandmyjumpphoneapplication
AT dimitriacastro reliabilityofverticaljumptestsbetweenthevertecandmyjumpphoneapplication
AT justintduong reliabilityofverticaljumptestsbetweenthevertecandmyjumpphoneapplication
AT fiorellajmalpartida reliabilityofverticaljumptestsbetweenthevertecandmyjumpphoneapplication
AT justinrusher reliabilityofverticaljumptestsbetweenthevertecandmyjumpphoneapplication
AT jennyo reliabilityofverticaljumptestsbetweenthevertecandmyjumpphoneapplication
_version_ 1725657620906246144