All Stories

  1. Biological sex minimally affects the free-weight back squat load-velocity profile when accounting for relative strength: An exploratory study
  2. Mitigation of Force and Vibration Transmission by the Hifim Jump Sled during Repeated Jumping in Microgravity
  3. Cross-Education of Skill: Assessment of Overhand Throwing Using Product- and Process-Oriented Assessment
  4. A Systematic Review of Spatial Differences of the Ball Impact within the Serve Type at Professional and Junior Tennis Players
  5. Muscular coordination during landing with a medially or laterally loaded tibiofemoral joint
  6. Performance Level and Strike Type during Ground and Pound Determine Impact Characteristics and Net Force Variability
  7. Repeated Horizontal Jumping is a Feasible Exercise Countermeasure for Microgravity
  8. Straight speed and acceleration optimal distances and reference values. A systematic review, and meta-analyses
  9. Repeated horizontal jumping is a feasible exercise countermeasure for microgravity
  10. Principal Component Analysis can Be Used to Discriminate Between Elite and Sub-Elite Kicking Performance
  11. Impact of Training Protocols on Lifting Velocity Recovery in Resistance Trained Males and Females
  12. Kinematic Determinants of Front Kick Dynamics Across Different Loading Conditions
  13. Task Demand Changes Motor Control Strategies in Vertical Jumping
  14. The influence of pain on tibiofemoral joint contact force and muscle forces in knee osteoarthritis patients during stair ascent
  15. Kinetic and Electromyographic Responses to Traditional and Assisted Nordic Hamstring Exercise
  16. Do sex differences in patellofemoral joint geometry influence quadriceps forces? What are the therapeutic implications?
  17. Neural network based approximation of muscle and joint contact forces during jumping and landing
  18. Muscular coordination during vertical jumping
  19. Force-velocity profiling is a misnomer: Load-jump height profiling would be a better name
  20. On the use and abuse of principal component analysis in biomechanics
  21. Knee Forces During Landing in Men and Women
  22. Principal Component Analysis Reveals the Proximal to Distal Pattern in Vertical Jumping Is Governed by Two Functional Degrees of Freedom
  23. Autoregulation by “Repetitions in Reserve” Leads to Greater Improvements in Strength Over a 12-Week Training Program Than Fixed Loading
  24. The Magical Horizontal Force Muscle? A Preliminary Study Examining the “Force-Vector” Theory
  25. An important role of the biarticular hamstrings is to exert internal/external rotation moments on the tibia during vertical jumping
  26. The patella: A mechanical determinant of coordination during vertical jumping
  27. Be as Upright as Possible When Squatting
  28. Advertising paid and unpaid job roles in sport: an updated position statement from the UK Strength and Conditioning Association
  29. Effects of an 8-week strength training intervention on tibiofemoral joint loading during landing: a cohort study
  30. Reliability and Minimal Detectable Change Values for Predictions of Knee Forces during Gait and Stair Ascent Derived from the FreeBody Musculoskeletal Model of the Lower Limb
  31. Effect of a gluteal activation warm-up on explosive exercise performance
  32. Lighter and heavier initial loads yield similar gains in strength when employing a progressive wave loading scheme
  33. Relative Intensity Influences the Degree of Correspondence of Jump Squats and Push Jerks to Countermovement Jumps
  34. The effect of weightlifting shoes on the kinetics and kinematics of the back squat
  35. Peak Power Output in the Bench Pull Is Maximized After Four Weeks of Specific Power Training
  36. The association between coat phenotype and morphology conducive to high running speeds in canis lupus familiaris
  37. The association between coat phenotype and morphology conducive to high running speeds in canis lupus familiaris
  38. In Vivo Knee Contact Force Prediction Using Patient-Specific Musculoskeletal Geometry in a Segment-Based Computational Model
  39. The development of a segment-based musculoskeletal model of the lower limb: introducing FreeBody
  40. The role of the biarticular hamstrings and gastrocnemius muscles in closed chain lower limb extension
  41. On the Role of the Patella, ACL and Joint Contact Forces in the Extension of the Knee
  42. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE NUMBER OF REPETITIONS PERFORMED AT GIVEN INTENSITIES IS DIFFERENT IN ENDURANCE AND STRENGTH TRAINED ATHLETES
  43. Letter to the Editor
  44. Intersegmental Moment Analysis Characterizes the Partial Correspondence of Jumping and Jerking
  45. Hip and knee joint loading during vertical jumping and push jerking
  46. Editorial
  47. The sensitivity of a lower limb model to axial rotation offsets and muscle bounds at the knee
  48. The development of lower limb musculoskeletal models with clinical relevance is dependent upon the fidelity of the mathematical description of the lower limb. Part 1: equations of motion
  49. The development of lower limb musculoskeletal models with clinical relevance is dependent upon the fidelity of the mathematical description of the lower limb. Part 2: patient-specific geometry
  50. Special issue on musculoskeletal modelling of the lower limb
  51. Erratum to: An Optimization Approach to Inverse Dynamics Provides Insight as to the Function of the Biarticular Muscles During Vertical Jumping
  52. Knee and hip joint forces – sensitivity to the degrees of freedom classification at the knee
  53. An Optimization-Based Simultaneous Approach to the Determination of Muscular, Ligamentous, and Joint Contact Forces Provides Insight into Musculoligamentous Interaction
  54. An Optimization Approach to Inverse Dynamics Provides Insight as to the Function of the Biarticular Muscles During Vertical Jumping
  55. Lower-extremity musculoskeletal geometry affects the calculation of patellofemoral forces in vertical jumping and weightlifting
  56. Influence of inverse dynamics methods on the calculation of inter-segmental moments in vertical jumping and weightlifting
  57. Quantifying delayed-onset muscle soreness: A comparison of unidimensional and multidimensional instrumentation
  58. ADJUSTING POWERLIFTING PERFORMANCES FOR DIFFERENCES IN BODY MASS
  59. Adjusting Powerlifting Performances for Differences in Body Mass