• 1 January 1978
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 10 (4), 270-275
Abstract
Subjects (5) performed 6 min of cycling exercise at a constant resistance (2 kg) and 3 pedalling frequencies (30, 50 and 75 rpm1). The resulting exercise intensities required 32, 45, 68% of their average .ovrhdot.VO2 max [maximal O2 uptake]. Electromyographic tracings (EMG) from the left quadriceps and magnitude estimates of overall effort sensations were made continuously. There was no difference in the area of the smooth rectified EMG resulting from frequency or number of contractions. Slopes of the effort-time functions were not significantly different between 30 and 50 rpm-1 and raised the issue of discriminability between cycling exercise intensities. The difference in slope between 50 and 75 rpm-1 was significant (P < 0.01). Oxygen uptake averaged for all subjects reached steady state between about 2-3 min of exercise but magnitude estimates of effort increased continuously during exercise. No correspondence was found between effort and .ovrhdot.VO2 when the peripheral signal to the effort sense was held constant. The 2nd input to the effort sense apparently does not arise from cardiovascular and respiratory responses to O2 demand from the periphery.

This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit: