Re: New study shows leg flexion less efficient than extensio
LOL. Let's see if we can come up with a scenario that might explain why that paper was so "badly received." Perhaps there was some very well known researcher there who had expressed strong views about the topic such that, if Lutrell was correct, it would be obvious to the world he cares about that he had been both petty and, more importantly, WRONG! Anyhow, it doesn't matter if the paper was badly received at some meeting or not. It is what it is and it stands on its own. Nothing since then has shown the data or protocol to be seriously flawed.CoachFergie said:PhitBoy said:CoachFergie said:One poorly performed study by Luttrell, that was published in JSCR, and was laughed off the stage when presented at ACSM because they couldn't show they had calibrated the gas analysis equipment properly, and several subsequent studies (Burns, and Williams studies for a start) showed no improvement in efficiency.
Ah Frank's beloved Luttrell and Potteiger study. I was there when it was presented at ACSM. There was a line at the mic with people waiting to ask questions. I didn't even get to ask a question before the moderator closed questions and moved on to the next speaker. One guy accused the speaker (I think Potteiger presented) of presenting a paid infomercial. I've never seen anything like the response to that presentation before or since.
As you mention there are likely a number of issues with that study. For me, the main issue is the use of the pan loaded Monark. Belts heat up and change friction over time. When we have used a pendulum loaded Monark we typically have a student designated to do nothing but keep an eye on the pendulum and constantly tweak it to hold it where we want it. With the pan load you have no idea what the resistance really is unless you have load cells on both ends of the belt. MacIntosh has a paper showing how inaccurate that system is.
Also, that 10% difference they report is so large that if it were real it would show up in other studies as you said. A single drop of lube (intentional or inadvertent) on the flywheel would go a long way to explain the results. When we lube the belts on our pendulum loaded ergs they require much more tension for the same load. Maybe the chain was making noise and the student running the study spayed lube on it and accidentally got some on the flywheel. And, as you mentioned there may have been met cart calibration issues. There are no doubt many reasons that paper only made it in to the lower tier JSCR.
Bad science gets published now and again but "truth will out" eventually.
Thanks, you're not the first to recall how badly received that paper was.
