首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     检索      


Foot strike patterns of recreational and sub-elite runners in a long-distance road race
Authors:Peter Larson  Erin Higgins  Justin Kaminski  Tamara Decker  Janine Preble  Daniela Lyons
Institution:1. Department of Biology , St. Anselm College , Manchester, New Hampshire, USA plarson@anselm.edu;3. Department of Biology , St. Anselm College , Manchester, New Hampshire, USA
Abstract:Abstract

Although the biomechanical properties of the various types of running foot strike (rearfoot, midfoot, and forefoot) have been studied extensively in the laboratory, only a few studies have attempted to quantify the frequency of running foot strike variants among runners in competitive road races. We classified the left and right foot strike patterns of 936 distance runners, most of whom would be considered of recreational or sub-elite ability, at the 10 km point of a half-marathon/marathon road race. We classified 88.9% of runners at the 10 km point as rearfoot strikers, 3.4% as midfoot strikers, 1.8% as forefoot strikers, and 5.9% of runners exhibited discrete foot strike asymmetry. Rearfoot striking was more common among our sample of mostly recreational distance runners than has been previously reported for samples of faster runners. We also compared foot strike patterns of 286 individual marathon runners between the 10 km and 32 km race locations and observed increased frequency of rearfoot striking at 32 km. A large percentage of runners switched from midfoot and forefoot foot strikes at 10 km to rearfoot strikes at 32 km. The frequency of discrete foot strike asymmetry declined from the 10 km to the 32 km location. Among marathon runners, we found no significant relationship between foot strike patterns and race times.
Keywords:Running  foot strike  biomechanics  fatigue  asymmetry  gait
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号