Association of Sex-Related Differences in Body Composition to Change of Direction Speed in Police Officers While Carrying Load
Asociación de Diferencias Relacionadas con el Sexo en la Composición Corporal para Cambiar la Velocidad de Dirección de Oficiales de Policía Durante el Transporte de Carga
Samo za registrovane korisnike
2020
Autori
Kukić, FilipKoropanovski, Nenad

Janković, Radivoje

Čvorović, Aleksandar
Daves, Jay J.
Lockie, Robert G.
Robin, Orr M.
Članak u časopisu (Objavljena verzija)
Metapodaci
Prikaz svih podataka o dokumentuApstrakt
Regardless of sex or body size, police tasks may require officers to change direction speed (CODS) under occupational
loads. The purpose of this study was to investigate body composition and CODS in female and male police cadets in both unloaded and
occupationally loaded conditions. Body composition and CODS of 51 female (FPC) and 70 male police cadets (MPC) were assessed. Six body
composition indices were used: Body mass index (BMI), percent body fat (PBF), percent of skeletal muscle mass (PSMM), protein fat index
(PFI), index of hypokinesia (IH), and skeletal muscle mass index (SMMI). The CODS was assessed by Illinois Agility Test (IAT) and IAT while
carrying a 10-kg load (LIAT). An independent sample t-test was used to identify the differences between the sexes. The regression determined
associations between body composition and LIAT. The alpha level was set at p < 0.05 a priori. MPC had significantly higher (p < 0.001) BMI,
PSMM, PFI and SMMI and lower PBF and IH than FPC. M...PC were also faster in IAT and LIAT, carrying lower relative loads that imparted less
of an impact on CODS performance. Body composition was strongly associated with the time to complete LIAT (R2 = 0.671, p < 0.001).
Difference in relative load and body composition influenced CODS performance in both unloaded and loaded conditions. Thus, optimizing body
composition through increasing skeletal muscle mass and reducing fat mass could positively influence unloaded and loaded CODS performance
and improve elements of police task performance.
Ključne reči:
agility / law enforcement / police cadets / occupational load / human body morphologyIzvor:
International Journal of Morphology (Revista Internacional de Morfología), 2020, 38, 3, 731-736Izdavač:
- Chile : Universidad de la Frontera
Institucija/grupa
JakovTY - JOUR AU - Kukić, Filip AU - Koropanovski, Nenad AU - Janković, Radivoje AU - Čvorović, Aleksandar AU - Daves, Jay J. AU - Lockie, Robert G. AU - Robin, Orr M. PY - 2020 UR - http://jakov.kpu.edu.rs/handle/123456789/1368 AB - Regardless of sex or body size, police tasks may require officers to change direction speed (CODS) under occupational loads. The purpose of this study was to investigate body composition and CODS in female and male police cadets in both unloaded and occupationally loaded conditions. Body composition and CODS of 51 female (FPC) and 70 male police cadets (MPC) were assessed. Six body composition indices were used: Body mass index (BMI), percent body fat (PBF), percent of skeletal muscle mass (PSMM), protein fat index (PFI), index of hypokinesia (IH), and skeletal muscle mass index (SMMI). The CODS was assessed by Illinois Agility Test (IAT) and IAT while carrying a 10-kg load (LIAT). An independent sample t-test was used to identify the differences between the sexes. The regression determined associations between body composition and LIAT. The alpha level was set at p < 0.05 a priori. MPC had significantly higher (p < 0.001) BMI, PSMM, PFI and SMMI and lower PBF and IH than FPC. MPC were also faster in IAT and LIAT, carrying lower relative loads that imparted less of an impact on CODS performance. Body composition was strongly associated with the time to complete LIAT (R2 = 0.671, p < 0.001). Difference in relative load and body composition influenced CODS performance in both unloaded and loaded conditions. Thus, optimizing body composition through increasing skeletal muscle mass and reducing fat mass could positively influence unloaded and loaded CODS performance and improve elements of police task performance. PB - Chile : Universidad de la Frontera T2 - International Journal of Morphology (Revista Internacional de Morfología) T1 - Association of Sex-Related Differences in Body Composition to Change of Direction Speed in Police Officers While Carrying Load T1 - Asociación de Diferencias Relacionadas con el Sexo en la Composición Corporal para Cambiar la Velocidad de Dirección de Oficiales de Policía Durante el Transporte de Carga VL - 38 IS - 3 SP - 731 EP - 736 DO - 10.4067/S0717-95022020000300731 ER -
@article{ author = "Kukić, Filip and Koropanovski, Nenad and Janković, Radivoje and Čvorović, Aleksandar and Daves, Jay J. and Lockie, Robert G. and Robin, Orr M.", year = "2020", abstract = "Regardless of sex or body size, police tasks may require officers to change direction speed (CODS) under occupational loads. The purpose of this study was to investigate body composition and CODS in female and male police cadets in both unloaded and occupationally loaded conditions. Body composition and CODS of 51 female (FPC) and 70 male police cadets (MPC) were assessed. Six body composition indices were used: Body mass index (BMI), percent body fat (PBF), percent of skeletal muscle mass (PSMM), protein fat index (PFI), index of hypokinesia (IH), and skeletal muscle mass index (SMMI). The CODS was assessed by Illinois Agility Test (IAT) and IAT while carrying a 10-kg load (LIAT). An independent sample t-test was used to identify the differences between the sexes. The regression determined associations between body composition and LIAT. The alpha level was set at p < 0.05 a priori. MPC had significantly higher (p < 0.001) BMI, PSMM, PFI and SMMI and lower PBF and IH than FPC. MPC were also faster in IAT and LIAT, carrying lower relative loads that imparted less of an impact on CODS performance. Body composition was strongly associated with the time to complete LIAT (R2 = 0.671, p < 0.001). Difference in relative load and body composition influenced CODS performance in both unloaded and loaded conditions. Thus, optimizing body composition through increasing skeletal muscle mass and reducing fat mass could positively influence unloaded and loaded CODS performance and improve elements of police task performance.", publisher = "Chile : Universidad de la Frontera", journal = "International Journal of Morphology (Revista Internacional de Morfología)", title = "Association of Sex-Related Differences in Body Composition to Change of Direction Speed in Police Officers While Carrying Load, Asociación de Diferencias Relacionadas con el Sexo en la Composición Corporal para Cambiar la Velocidad de Dirección de Oficiales de Policía Durante el Transporte de Carga", volume = "38", number = "3", pages = "731-736", doi = "10.4067/S0717-95022020000300731" }
Kukić, F., Koropanovski, N., Janković, R., Čvorović, A., Daves, J. J., Lockie, R. G.,& Robin, O. M.. (2020). Association of Sex-Related Differences in Body Composition to Change of Direction Speed in Police Officers While Carrying Load. in International Journal of Morphology (Revista Internacional de Morfología) Chile : Universidad de la Frontera., 38(3), 731-736. https://doi.org/10.4067/S0717-95022020000300731
Kukić F, Koropanovski N, Janković R, Čvorović A, Daves JJ, Lockie RG, Robin OM. Association of Sex-Related Differences in Body Composition to Change of Direction Speed in Police Officers While Carrying Load. in International Journal of Morphology (Revista Internacional de Morfología). 2020;38(3):731-736. doi:10.4067/S0717-95022020000300731 .
Kukić, Filip, Koropanovski, Nenad, Janković, Radivoje, Čvorović, Aleksandar, Daves, Jay J., Lockie, Robert G., Robin, Orr M., "Association of Sex-Related Differences in Body Composition to Change of Direction Speed in Police Officers While Carrying Load" in International Journal of Morphology (Revista Internacional de Morfología), 38, no. 3 (2020):731-736, https://doi.org/10.4067/S0717-95022020000300731 . .