Sylvain Gouge’s research while affiliated with University of Burgundy and other places

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Publications (1)


Validity and Reliability of Optojump Photoelectric Cells for Estimating Vertical Jump Height
  • Article
  • Full-text available

February 2011

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4,415 Reads

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654 Citations

The Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research

Julia F Glatthorn

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Sylvain Gouge

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S Nussbauber

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[...]

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Vertical jump is one of the most prevalent acts performed in several sport activities. It is therefore important to ensure that the measurements of vertical jump height made as a part of research or athlete support work have adequate validity and reliability. The aim of this study was to evaluate concurrent validity and reliability of the Optojump photocell system (Microgate, Bolzano, Italy) with force plate measurements for estimating vertical jump height. Twenty subjects were asked to perform maximal squat jumps and countermovement jumps, and flight time-derived jump heights obtained by the force plate were compared with those provided by Optojump, to examine its concurrent (criterion-related) validity (study 1). Twenty other subjects completed the same jump series on 2 different occasions (separated by 1 week), and jump heights of session 1 were compared with session 2, to investigate test-retest reliability of the Optojump system (study 2). Intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) for validity were very high (0.997-0.998), even if a systematic difference was consistently observed between force plate and Optojump (-1.06 cm; p < 0.001). Test-retest reliability of the Optojump system was excellent, with ICCs ranging from 0.982 to 0.989, low coefficients of variation (2.7%), and low random errors (±2.81 cm). The Optojump photocell system demonstrated strong concurrent validity and excellent test-retest reliability for the estimation of vertical jump height. We propose the following equation that allows force plate and Optojump results to be used interchangeably: force plate jump height (cm) = 1.02 × Optojump jump height + 0.29. In conclusion, the use of Optojump photoelectric cells is legitimate for field-based assessments of vertical jump height.

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Citations (1)


... The Optojump Next system, which comprises two parallel bars placed 1 meter apart, was employed for this purpose, following the methodology described by Healy et al. [26]. Power assessment was performed according to the protocol by Glatthorn et al. [27], which showed SJ and CMJ reliability and validity amounting to 0.997 and 0.998, respectively. Furthermore, results from the study conducted by Martinopoulou et al. [28] suggest that the ability to exert rapid force is similar between the CMJ and the SJ, irrespective of the type of muscle action, which implies that these types of jumps could be used interchangeably to assess lower extremity power. ...

Reference:

Correlations between tensiomyography variables and lower extremity power
Validity and Reliability of Optojump Photoelectric Cells for Estimating Vertical Jump Height

The Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research