Nicolas Fabre
Mid Sweden University
16 Papers
43 Citations
Nicolas Fabre is an academic researcher from Mid Sweden University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ventilatory threshold & Lactate threshold. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 13 publications.
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Papers
Effect of slope and footwear on running economy and kinematics.
TL;DR: It is found that Cr increased with slope gradient and was on average 1.3% lower in MS than TS (P < 0.01), and that the between‐footwear kinematic alterations with slope provided limited explanations.
68
•Journal Article
Exertion during uphill, level and downhill walking with and without hiking poles.
Stéphane Perrey,Nicolas Fabre +1 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that the use of the hiking poles had a significant influence on the respiratory and energetic responses only during downhill walking, and supplementary studies in the field are needed in order to confirm the original results obtained in downhill.
31
Cross-country skiing and postexercise heart-rate recovery.
Laurent Mourot,Nicolas Fabre,Erik Andersson,Sarah J. Willis,Martin Buchheit,Hans-Christer Holmberg +5 more
TL;DR: It is confirmed that XCS performance is largely correlated with VO2max and the ability to tolerate high levels of BLa; however, postexercise HRR showed no clear association with performance.
10
Alterations in aerobic energy expenditure and neuromuscular function during a simulated cross-country skiathlon with the skating technique
Nicolas Fabre,Laurent Mourot,Chiara Zoppirolli,Erik Andersson,Sarah J. Willis,Hans-Christer Holmberg +5 more
TL;DR: The hypothesis that aerobic energy expenditure (AEE) is higher during a simulated 6-km (2 loops of 3-km each) "skiathlon" than during skating only on a treadmill is tested and any such increase to biomechanical and neuromuscular responses is attempted.
5
Paced breathing in roller-ski skating: effects on metabolic rate and poling forces.
TL;DR: No difference was observed for VO2 between spontaneous and paced breathing conditions, although RPE was lower with paced breathing, and some biomechanical variables could be explained by the extensive experience of subjects in cross-country skiing.
5