Pirouette Vertical Ground Reaction Force of Ballet Dancers and Non-Dancers
Author(s) -
Cynthia Yukiko Hiraga,
Camila Siriani,
Paulo Ricardo Higassiaraguti Rocha,
Débora Alves Souza,
José Ângelo Barela
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
brazilian journal of motor behavior
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2446-4902
pISSN - 1980-5586
DOI - 10.20338/bjmb.v14i2.159
Subject(s) - ballet , ballet dancer , ground reaction force , force platform , impulse (physics) , dance , physical medicine and rehabilitation , psychology , medicine , physics , art , visual arts , kinematics , classical mechanics
PUBLICATION DATA Received 09 12 2019 Accepted 15 05 2020 Published 01 07 2020 BACKGROUND: Different amounts of force are needed to produce an effective turn for the pirouette, especially vertical force. AIM: To examine the vertical force produced by the supporting leg during the execution of a pirouette en dehors of ballet dancer and non-dancer participants. METHOD: The participants included five ballet dancers who composed the ballet dancer group and eight girls without previous experience of dance training who composed the non-dancer group. The participants were invited to execute the pirouette en dehors on a force platform with each leg as the supporting leg. Two-way analyses of variance were used to test vertical reaction forces between the two groups over the preferred and non-preferred leg. RESULTS: Among the three vertical forces measured in the present study, the maximum vertical peak for the initial impulse was significantly higher for the ballet dancers compared to the non-dancer girls. The minimum vertical force and maximum vertical peak for the final impulse were similar between both groups. CONCLUSION: The results suggest that the initial vertical force may be critical to the pirouette en dehors, determining proficient execution of this movement in ballet dancers.
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