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The Biofeedback - Neurofeedback is
ProComp/Infiniti – BioGraph Infiniti - from Thought
Technology Ltd.!
Using Technology
to Gain an Edge
2010 Games are about ice, snow and guys in
lab coats
By GARY KINGSTON, Canwest News Service
October 21, 2009
Canada, competing in the four-man bobsled
competition in Turin in 2006, is working on ways to reduce
friction between bobsled runners and ice.
Nearly a dozen years ago, as parabolic-shaped skis and speed-skating
clap skates were significantly altering the landscape of two
marquee sports of the Winter Olympic Games, a U.S. Olympic
Committee sports science engineer jokingly mused about how
far technology might go.
At least, we think he was joking.
"They've been asking me to conceal
a motor in a bobsled," Tim Conrad said. "For the
moment, it's too obvious with the smoke and the noise, but
give me time, give me time."
Without going James Bond and surreptitiously
slipping into the sled house of the U.S. or German bobsled
federations for a tear down, we can't totally be sure that
time isn't now.
But setting aside the prospect of pull
start, not push start, bobsleds that are quieter than your
latest dishwasher, sport scientists - with the support of
aerospace and military engineers - have never been so busy
in the lab, on the ice, in the wind tunnel and on the slopes.
There might not be anything as visibly
revolutionary as shaped skis and hinged speed skates unveiled
at Vancouver/Whistler in 2010.
More stringent rule specifications
from sport governing bodies mean radical changes to bobsleds,
skates, luge sleds, biathlon rifles and skis just won't happen.
But athletes around the world will
benefit at the Games from highly advanced real-time video-analysis
software, on-hill GPS monitoring, studies into the physics
of ice-metal interfaces as they relate to skeleton and bobsled
runners, and the latest in aerodynamic, lightweight, friction-reducing
clothing.
Canada, of course, has been at the
forefront with the top- secret component of its Own the Podium
program, designed to put the country at the top of the medals
standings. More than 30 research projects received priority
funding.
One of those projects, developed by
the Schulich School of Engineering in Calgary and disclosed
by Alpine Canada in late 2007, had alpine skiers testing the
course at Whistler outfitted with an ultra-light wireless
timing device on the top of their helmet. Information relayed
to a computer program would let the coaches and skiers know
what type of skis ran fastest on which sections of the course
and under which weather conditions and on different types
of snow.
"Our video analysis has got a
lot better; there's a lot more detailed information than we
had even two or three years ago," said Max Gartner, Alpine
Canada's athletics director.
Canada's luge, skeleton and bobsled
teams have been using a detailed immediate feedback video
analysis system that employs 25 cameras on the sliding track
at Whistler. Luge head coach Wolfgang Staudinger says it is
a camera system that no other country has.
Beyond that system and the skiers'
"little black box," OTP has kept most of its other
top- secret work under wraps. OTP director Roger Jackson says
we'll see and hear of some of those projects in
December-January, when it's "too
late for anybody to take advantage of what we've learned."
"But a lot of the stuff we've
been doing is related to training rather than necessarily
competition," Jackson added. "You may not see a
brand-new bobsled that looks like a spaceship. ... We have
gone down certain roads and things haven't worked out. And
there are things that we are doing now that are going to be
used. You'll be seeing physical expressions of some of the
equipment, clothing and other things that we've been working
on."
Many of the successes have come in
the areas of high-speed video analysis, development of wax
preparations and work directly related to athletic performance.
That includes biomechanics, exercise physiology, psychology,
sleep and recovery techniques, and nutrition.
The freestyle ski team, for instance,
has for the last two years been using a bio/neurofeedback
program run by sports psychology consultant Penny Werthner.
Hooked up to electrodes and sensors that activate coloured
charts on a computer screen in front of them, the athletes
learn how to use the right breathing and focusing techniques
to ensure they reach the optimal mental and physical state
to perform at their best.
On the clothing side, it's very likely
that Canadian cross-country skiers, lugers and speed skaters
will be wearing new race suits at some point during this World
Cup season.
Darren Stefanyshyn, one of the world's
leading sports- gear researchers in the University of Calgary's
Human Performance Lab, says "we're just starting to see
the initial tip of the iceberg" in terms of racing apparel.
He says the banning of the controversial
LZR swimsuit, which was responsible for a slew of records
in the pool in 2008, wasn't so much a setback as a redirection
for researchers.
"It's just like anything else,"
Stefanyshyn said. "Rules are made, certain regulations
are put in place, but smart people like research scientists
figure out ways to still make improvements without breaking
those rules."
And that work fuels the ongoing debate
about how far science, lab research and new technology should
play in high performance sport. Even those involved seem conflicted.
"If it were up to me," said
Louis Poirer, a former national team bobsledder and now a
University of Calgary physics PhD student who is investigating
friction between skate blades and bobsled runners, "I'd
rather see everything standardized and have it played out
completely in the field. Best athletes win."
Stefanyshyn says it's an ethical question
that will be debated "until we're not here anymore."
He says he has no qualms about what he does.
"I don't care what anybody says,
basically life is not fair. Sports is not fair," Stefanyshyn
said. "Yes, I want the best athlete to win. At the same
time, it's not fair that some people are born 6-foot-2 and
some are 5-foot-2.
"There are certain resources that
certain athletes or countries have that others don't. That's
not only true in the piece of equipment, but it's also true
in coaching. Some nations can afford better coaches and can
hire coaches away from other countries. People seem to associate
unfairness with pieces of equipment, but it can occur in many
different facets of sports."
© Copyright (c) The Montreal Gazette
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