Stan Grant
University of Glasgow
53 Papers
512 Citations
Stan Grant is an academic researcher from University of Glasgow. The author has contributed to research in topics: VO2 max & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 53 publications. Previous affiliations of Stan Grant include Western Infirmary.
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Papers
A Comparison of the Reproducibility and the Sensitivity to Change of Visual Analogue Scales, Borg Scales, and Likert Scales in Normal Subjects During Submaximal Exercise
Stan Grant,Tom Aitchison,Esther Henderson,Jim Christie,Sharam Zare,John J.V. McMurray,Henry J. Dargie +6 more
TL;DR: This study suggests that subjective scales can reproducibly measure symptoms during steady-state exercise and can detect the effect of a drug intervention.
562
Total energy expenditure and physical activity in young Scottish children: mixed longitudinal study
John J. Reilly,Diane M Jackson,Colette Montgomery,LA Kelly,Christine Slater,Stan Grant,James Y. Paton +6 more
TL;DR: TEE, physical activity, and sedentary behaviour in a representative sample of young children from Glasgow, UK, at age 3 years and a follow-up study at age 5 years showed that modern British children establish a sedentary lifestyle at an early age.
459
Monitoring of physical activity in young children: How much is enough?
John J. Reilly,Victoria Penpraze,Christina MacLean,Colette Montgomery,Louise A. Kelly,James Y. Paton,Tom Aitchison,Stan Grant +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured 76 children (40 M and 36 F, mean age 5.6 years [SD ± 0.4]) on 7 days using Actigraph accelerometers.
248
Anthropometric, strength, endurance and flexibility characteristics of elite and recreational climbers
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that elite climbers have greater shoulder girdle endurance, finger strength and hip flexibility than recreational climbers and non-climbers and those who aspire to lead 'E1' standard climbs or above should consider training programmes to enhance their finger strength, shoulder girdsle strength and endurance, and Hip flexibility.
232
A comparison of the anthropometric, strength, endurance and flexibility characteristics of female elite and recreational climbers and non-climbers
TL;DR: It is suggested that elite climbers have greater finger strength than recreational climbers and non-climbers.
163