Alex Simmons/RST said:Thanks for the info and insight, and you are right, I don't know those climbs from personal experience, only from the power meter data my clients have provided and which validated my method of estimating W/kg, which covers most of the major French alpine climbs.
I certainly haven't suggested the weather changed in 1991, but who knows with global warming, perhaps can we blame that on Lance and Hein?![]()
More seriously though, it is possible to to apply the maths to parse out from power meter data the likely impact of wind, and to show on what parts of a course it was negligible, beneficial and detrimental, and to what extent. You do need a little knowledge of the rider's morphological characteristics, and their power meter file from a quality power meter along with an accurate elevation profile, but it's certainly do-able via the technique of virtual elevation profiling.
Or it might indeed have a tendency to bias certain climbs in one particular direction as you pointed out, meaning the W/kg estimates for a given climb might tend towards one or other of under or over estimation.
But I totally agree, the data should really be looked in terms of the general trends over the longer term. Picking out one individual ride however will have a lower level of precision because of the uncertainty of the inputs - and that's really my point.
What is precisely known (we hope) are the rider's actual climb times, so why not simply chart those for each climb and avoid the precision problems when attempting to first estimate and then normalise to W/kg estimates? The trends will still be there if you plot each climb separately.
Not sure if it's being added or considered or already done, but a database of climbs, precise timing points, rider's times during official races, dates and comments on the conditions and race situation would be quite an interesting resource.
jw1979 said:1/10
Thanks for the reminder to ride my bike more, read books in print more, and spend less time on the forums.
Le breton said:When I read all this junk from people who took stats courses, I am glad I never did![]()
richtea said:Of course there is such a thing as 7 standard deviations from the mean in a normal distribution.
since we're talking about population, may I point out that the 3% of the world population is still an awful lot of people.Galic Ho said:Not for total populations there ain't. But keep telling us that. If you go above 3 SD's the bands are so narrow it isn't funny because statistically, like I said, that leaves maybe if you're lucky 3% of a population. Ain't nobody human in any sport gonna be at the 7th SD, let alone 8th. Sure for income...but keep it relevant. This is human bodies, not economics. The scale and area of measurement are very limited.
Come on man, keep it real here for a second. VO2 max...I pretty much gave you the average. Name me one pro ATM who has one over 90, which is double the average males. Name one. Then name me one who can push out 85-90% of that at FTP for 40mins to an hour at the end of a 5 hour stage in the final week of a GT. You can't. Then tell me they're 7 SD's from the mean. They're not in terms of pure VO2max.
You're forgetting, like most do, this is about POPULATION. If we narrowed this even further among pro's, it'd been an even more of a stickler.
Anyway, I've said enough. Lemond's VO2max is UPPER UBER ELITE LIMIT. Only Bjorne Daehlie has one recorded higher and his sport uses both upper and lower body power. If Lemond was a cross country skier, his would have been as high. If you tested enough people, you'd find Lemond and Hinault fall just outside the 3rd SD. Most cycling pros fall just on or over 2 SD's. But if you want to kid yourself, they're 7 times better...by all means, laugh away.
Galic Ho said:It's actually really simple stuff. Relevant for psych, accounting, marketing and some math disciplines. It's pretty straight forward. Everything falls in a bell curve and most people fall within 1 standard deviation of the mean. The elite in any population are 3 SD's to the RIGHT of the mean. Very few make it there.
So this covers sports, athletic performances, academic performance, etc. Yes it can be boring but it's simple to understand. Just gotta know the basics and not mess Z and T tables up. Also gotta remember the basic rules...so many people break them it isn't funny, which are big NO NO's.
Galic Ho said:Not for total populations there ain't. But keep telling us that. If you go above 3 SD's the bands are so narrow it isn't funny because statistically, like I said, that leaves maybe if you're lucky 3% of a population. Ain't nobody human in any sport gonna be at the 7th SD, let alone 8th. Sure for income...but keep it relevant. This is human bodies, not economics. The scale and area of measurement are very limited.
Come on man, keep it real here for a second. VO2 max...I pretty much gave you the average. Name me one pro ATM who has one over 90, which is double the average males. Name one. Then name me one who can push out 85-90% of that at FTP for 40mins to an hour at the end of a 5 hour stage in the final week of a GT. You can't. Then tell me they're 7 SD's from the mean. They're not in terms of pure VO2max.
You're forgetting, like most do, this is about POPULATION. If we narrowed this even further among pro's, it'd been an even more of a stickler.
Anyway, I've said enough. Lemond's VO2max is UPPER UBER ELITE LIMIT. Only Bjorne Daehlie has one recorded higher and his sport uses both upper and lower body power. If Lemond was a cross country skier, his would have been as high. If you tested enough people, you'd find Lemond and Hinault fall just outside the 3rd SD. Most cycling pros fall just on or over 2 SD's. But if you want to kid yourself, they're 7 times better...by all means, laugh away.
mewmewmew13 said:a bit of input from doc on veloclinic or @veloclinic on twit
http://veloclinic.tumblr.com/post/52412273102/altitude-6-watts-onna-boar-continued
Merckx index said:Most purely physiological characteristics are distributed normally. But many qualities aren’t, particularly anything social like wealth, which someone mentioned. hat is generally distributed on a power law or scale free distribution, where the vast majority have a relatively small amount, and there is a long tail of very wealthy people. Wealth is distributed this way for the same reason internet links are—because the more wealth you have, the easier it is to acquire some more.
Ferminal said:LeMond I guess.
Lemond Greg
Voeckler Thomas
Hinault Bernard
Fignon Laurent
Evans Cadel
Moreau Christophe
Virenque Richard
Wiggins Bradley
Froome Chris
Valverde Alessandro
Jalabert Laurent
Schleck Andy
Vinokourov Alexandre
Landis Floyd
Basso Ivan
Armstrong Lance
Contador Alberto
Indurain Miguel
Ullrich Jan
Riis Bjarne
Pantani Marco
Lemond Greg
Hinault Bernard
Indurain Miguel
86TDFWinner said:Maybe now this will FINALLY put to bed this "Lemond doped too" nonsense all the butthurt Wonderboy fans keep spewing?
LaFlorecita said:No butthurt Wonderboy fan but I do think he dopedno offense
Alex Simmons/RST said:I thought it was in French, or did I miss an English language version?
LaFlorecita said:No butthurt Wonderboy fan but I do think he dopedno offense
Merckx index said:..........
E.g., scale free properties have been described in the brain of humans and other mammals, both in the way neurons are connected, and in the activity that occurs in these networks. But IQ,which can be understood as emergent from these networks, is still distributed in a near normal way. .
I use my own models, but it can be done at first pass using Aerolab in Golden Cheetah software, but requires some knowledge about appropriate inputs and an experienced eye with such data to know when it does/doesn't make sense.Le breton said:That would be an interesting exercise, very time consuming though as you need to a lot of adjusting and "bootstrapping".
Nah, not even close. If I ever were to write a book (I won't since I have a Sydney mortgage to keep up and other more important things to do than pub chats like this), it wouldn't be about this.Le breton said:Sounds like you might have accumulated enough data to write a book of your own on that topic, but you probably would need your clients to agree to it.
Le breton said:FWIW
Polar has been studying fitness for a long time.
Their own index is a proxy for VO2 max
They obtained an average of 43 for the 20-29 y. males group
with a s.d of 7
If that is the case and the distribution were normal, then somebody with a VO2 max of 93 would be at (93-43)/7 = 7 standard deviations above the mean.
However it has to be taken with a grain of salt as they have not collated VO2 for millions of people.
Still, it shows that the very best really are far far beyond 3 s.d.
HOW TO INTERPRET POLAR OWNINDEX®
OwnIndex is equivalent to the maximal aerobic power, VO2max, in ml/min/kg. This indicates how many millilitres of oxygen your body is able to transport and use per each kilogram of your body weight in one minute. The maximal aerobic power, as any other fitness test result, is most meaningful when used in comparing individual values and changes. Norms, rather national, can be used to compare the fitness results to the average values of those with the same age and gender. Below an example of normal values presented as a mean (standard deviation) according to the age group (Fletcher et al. 1995).
VO2max ,ml/min/kg
Age, years Men Women
20-29 43(7) 36(7)
30-39 42(7) 34(6)
40-49 40(7) 32(6)
50-59 36(7) 29(5)
60-69 33(7) 27(5)
Individual OwnIndex can be compared to the population norms as follows: One standard deviation around the mean (half SD up and half down) represents "average fitness". E.g. for a 33-year-old woman any index between 31-37 (34-3 and 34+3) represents "average fitness" compared to other women of the same age. Values less than 31 are below the average and those higher than 37 are above the average.
For international use the fitness classification by Shvartz & Reibold (1990) presented in Table 1 is recommended.
MEN / MAXIMAL OXYGEN UPTAKE (VO2max, ml/kg/min)
AGE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
20-24 <32 32-37 38-43 44-50 51-56 57-62 >62
25-29 <31 31-35 36-42 43-48 49-53 54-59 >59
30-34 <29 29-34 35-40 41-45 46-51 52-56 >56
35-39 <28 28-32 33-38 39-43 44-48 49-54 >54
40-44 <26 26-31 32-35 36-41 42-46 47-51 >51
45-49 <25 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-43 44-48 >48
50-54 <24 24-27 28-32 33-36 37-41 42-46 >46
55-59 <22 22-26 27-30 31-34 35-39 40-43 >43
60-65 <21 21-24 25-28 29-32 33-36 37-40 >40
WOMEN / MAXIMAL OXYGEN UPTAKE (VO2max, ml/kg/min)
AGE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
20-24 <27 27-31 32-36 37-41 42-46 47-51 >51
25-29 <26 26-30 31-35 36-40 41-44 45-49 >49
30-34 <25 25-29 30-33 34-37 38-42 43-46 >46
35-39 <24 24-27 28-31 32-35 36-40 41-44 >44
40-44 <22 22-25 26-29 30-33 34-37 38-41 >41
45-49 <21 21-23 24-27 28-31 32-35 36-38 >38
50-54 <19 19-22 23-25 26-29 30-32 33-36 >36
55-59 <18 18-20 21-23 24-27 28-30 31-33 >33
60-65 <16 16-18 19-21 22-24 25-27 28-30 >30
In this classification, class 1 corresponds to "very poor", class 2 "poor", class 3 "fair", class 4 "average", class 5 "good", class 6 "very good" and class 7 "excellent" cardiovascular fitness compared to individuals of the same gender and age. In a population, 11 % of the people belong to classes 1-2 and 6-7, 22% in classes 3 and 5 and 34% in class 4. This corresponds to "gaussian distribution", because the classification has been developed in representative samples of individuals from different countries.
The Hitch said:Lemond said he would ban riders for straight up blood doping /epo positive, but thinks its a little more complicated with riders who test positiive for small numbers of mickey mouse drugs (like for example i dont know, clenbuterol)
Do you reconsider your opinion?
LaFlorecita said:No, I thought the riders were in order of ridiculousness. I dunno.