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Department of Sport Sciences, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, 7055 Dragvoll, Norway
Received 7 June 1995; accepted in final form 24 June 1996.
Almåsbakk, Bjørn, and Jan Hoff. Coordination, the
determinant of velocity specificity? J. Appl. Physiol.
80(5): 2046-2052, 1996.
Initial strength gains were examined
in the context of learning a new skill. Forty female volunteers were
randomly assigned to one of four groups: a bench-press training group
utilizing heavy loads in its training, a bench-press training group
utilizing almost no load, an alternative training group using different exercises, or a control group that did not train. Training period was 6 wk, with three training sessions per week. Emphasis was put on keeping
the coordination and muscular adaptation demands in the bench-press
groups as invariant as possible. Bench-press training with a light or
with a heavy weight was shown to be equally effective in improving the
maximal velocity of contraction for a given absolute resistance. Mean
velocity with loads of 0.37, 6.6, 16.6, and 20 kg improved by 21.1, 15.8, 16.9, and 19.5%, respectively. No significant differences in the
percent improvement at the four different loads were apparent,
indicating that no significant velocity-specific adaptations were
present. The bench-press training group, utilizing heavy loads in its
training, was the only group with improved one repetition maximum.
Overall, findings point to the development of coordination as the
determining factor in early velocity-specific strength gains.
strength training; force-velocity relationship; maximum dynamic strength; women
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