Ronald J. Maughan
University of St Andrews
363 Papers
2.5K Citations
Ronald J. Maughan is an academic researcher from University of St Andrews. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & VO2 max. The author has an hindex of 78, co-authored 360 publications. Previous affiliations of Ronald J. Maughan include Loughborough University & Andrews University.
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Papers
Research methods in physical activity.
TL;DR: The first edition of this book appeared in 1985, and it seems remarkable that the two authors of that book were the same people as the authors of this paper as discussed by the authors, who published seven editions over a period of 30 years.
1.3K
Effects of ambient temperature on the capacity to perform prolonged cycle exercise in man
TL;DR: There is a clear effect of temperature on exercise capacity which appears to follow an inverted U relationship, and significant effects of Ta were observed on VE, VO2, R, estimated fuel oxidation, HR, Tre, Tsk, sweat rate, and RPE.
699
IOC Consensus Statement: Dietary Supplements and the High-Performance Athlete
Ronald J. Maughan,Louise M. Burke,Jiri Dvorak,D. Enette Larson-Meyer,Peter Peeling,Peter Peeling,Stuart M. Phillips,Eric S. Rawson,Neil P. Walsh,Ina Garthe,Hans Geyer,Romain Meeusen,Lucas J. C. van Loon,S. M. Shirreffs,Lawrence L. Spriet,Mark Stuart,Alan Vernec,Kevin Currell,Vidya M. Ali,Richard Budgett,Arne Ljungqvist,Margo Mountjoy,Yannis P. Pitsiladis,Torbjørn Soligard,Uğur Erdener,Lars Engebretsen +25 more
TL;DR: The appropriate use of some supplements can benefit the athlete, but others may harm the athlete’s health, performance, and/or livelihood and reputation and expert professional opinion and assistance is strongly advised before an athlete embarks on supplement use.
596
Current status of body composition assessment in sport: review and position statement on behalf of the ad hoc research working group on body composition health and performance, under the auspices of the I.O.C. Medical Commission.
Tim Ackland,Timothy G. Lohman,Jorunn Sundgot-Borgen,Ronald J. Maughan,Nanna L. Meyer,Arthur D. Stewart,Wolfram Müller +6 more
TL;DR: Having considered issues of accuracy, repeatability and utility, the multi-component model might be employed as a performance or selection criterion, provided the selected model accounts for variability in the density of fat-free mass in its computation.
562
Post-exercise rehydration in man: effects of volume consumed and drink sodium content.
TL;DR: A drink volume greater than sweat loss during exercise must be ingested to restore fluid balance, but unless the sodium content of the beverage is sufficiently high this will merely result in an increased urinary output.
352