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Connection between anthropometry and training sensitivity to the given lift

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  • Jamesmtn
    replied
    Originally posted by Jordan Feigenbaum View Post
    I haven't seen this relationship in practice or in the literature.

    Further, the guy with the longer legs may not have more displacement of their center of mass than the short legged guy. These things are....nuanced.

    Now, if the 4th digit is significantly longer than the 2nd digit.....

    Jordan not an elite athlete, confirmed: https://youtu.be/1FWDde2IEPg?t=4m11s

    My faith in my own potential future jackitude is restored

    Leave a comment:


  • llaffin
    replied
    Scratch that previous question.

    Did some research and found this paper for anyone interested: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5765794/

    It looked at elite level wrestlers (n=10), non-elite level wrestlers (n=20), and age matched sedentary adults (n=40), all males. It found an average right hand 2D:4D ratio of 0.93, 0.97, and 0.98 in each group respectively.

    Leave a comment:


  • llaffin
    replied
    Originally posted by Jordan Feigenbaum View Post

    Now, if the 4th digit is significantly longer than the 2nd digit.....
    Curious, what counts as 'significantly' longer?

    Leave a comment:


  • Jordan Feigenbaum
    replied
    I haven't seen this relationship in practice or in the literature.

    Further, the guy with the longer legs may not have more displacement of their center of mass than the short legged guy. These things are....nuanced.

    Now, if the 4th digit is significantly longer than the 2nd digit.....

    Leave a comment:


  • Connection between anthropometry and training sensitivity to the given lift

    Hello.
    Assume the 2 anthropometries for the squat: long legged guy with short torso and short legged guy with long torso.
    Could we, in general, assume that one will need more or less volume at a productive intensity to make progress on the lift based solely on the anthropometry?
    Example: Long legged guy's squats have longer ROM and therefore each rep is a more work done compared to the guy with shorter legs. Therefore longer legged guy can make progress on less volume compared to the short legged one, assuming both have similar level of training advancement.
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