Vol 13, Issue 4

Energy Expenditure and Muscular Recruitment Patterns of Riding a Novel Electrically Powered Skateboard

Authors

Anthony J. RobinsonUniversity of California, Los Angeles
Robert P. CarterUniversity of California, Los Angeles
Jonathan D. BrowneUniversity of California, Los Angeles
Jonathan HuUniversity of California, Los Angeles
Michael T. ArnoldUniversity of California, Los Angeles
Jaxon T. BaumUniversity of California, Los Angeles
Eric V. NeufeldUniversity of California, Los Angeles
Brett A. DolezalUniversity of California, Los Angeles
International Journal of Exercise Science 13(4): 1783-1793, 2020.
DOI: 10.70252/TWHF7333

Abstract

Analysis of metabolic gas exchange and muscular output measures have enabled researchers to index activity intensity and energy expenditure for a myriad of exercises. However, there is no current research that investigates the physiological demands of riding electrically powered skateboards. The aim of this study was to measure the energetic cost and muscular trends of riding a novel electrically powered skateboard engineered to emulate snowboarding on dry-land. While riding the skateboard, eight participants (aged 21-37 years, 1 female) donned a portable breath-by-breath gas analyzer to measure energy expenditure (mean = 12.5, SD = 2 kcal/min), maximum heart rate (mean = 158, SD = 27 bpm), and metabolic equivalent (mean = 10.5, SD = 2 kcal/kg/h). By comparison, snowboarding has a metabolic equivalent (MET) of 8.0. Per the Compendium of Physical Activities guidelines, the predicted MET values for riding an electrically powered skateboard qualifies as vigorous-intensity activity. Four participants additionally wore a surface EMG embedded garment to record the percentage of maximum voluntary contraction (%MVC) of lower limb muscle groups. The inner quadriceps had the most pronounced mean peak muscle activation of 145%MVC during frontside and 164%MVC during frontside turns. EMG recordings showed 11.7%MVC higher utilization during backside turns compared to frontside turns while riding the electrically powered skateboard, which is similar to trends observed in alpine snowboarders. Therefore, electrically powered skateboards may be a promising technology for snowboarders and non-snowboarders alike to burn calories and increase physical activity year-round.

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