- Jul 4, 2009
 
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acoggan said:
...a couple of questions for Dr. Coggan...
...first...when I was first looking at the 1991 Coyle article I spent some time looking at the three graphs that showed pedal position, vertical force and horizontal force....what I found interesting initially was the timing differences between the two groups in terms of the moment of power applications...the rest of the graph information seemed pretty straight forward. as in, anything below the horizontal zero line was negative torque...when another study was presented here the power output was shown as a bar graph, and here the vertical and horizontal components seemed to all show positive torque...
...so I guess the question is...why does one graph show positive and the other negative?...
...second...when you look at the way human hearing works it is sometimes easier to look at the ear as a half-wave rectifier, that is, it responds much more effectively to the positive part of the sound wave than the negative...this function is supposedly a response by evolution to design for simplicity and since sound waves are generally symmetrical, measuring just one side of the wave more precisely is good enough...
...so the question is...since nature designs for simplicity and it sometimes uses similar machine language to solve different tasks is it possible that the system that operates our walking/running functions is also a kind of half-wave rectifier...as in the down-stoke and the back-stroke are much more elegant than the upstroke...( and to bring this back to the topic at hand...is a runner who is lighter on his feet more efficient than one who isn't? )
Cheers
blutto
				
		
			
	