Study note • PMID 25029000
Autonomic response to tactical pistol performance measured by heart rate variability.
Worth trying if it fits your goal and context.
ELI5
In plain language
This study evaluated changes in autonomic tone during a tactical pistol competition. (controlled study; participants).
The abstract reports an association involving Recovery speed (not necessarily causation). Treat this as a signal, not a guarantee; confirm methods and context in the full paper.
Takeaways
What the abstract suggests
- • Study question: This study evaluated changes in autonomic tone during a tactical pistol competition.
- • The abstract reports an association involving Recovery speed (not necessarily causation).
- • Population: participants.
- • Protocol cues: abstract may omit dose/timing; use the full paper to replicate accurately.
Protocol
Protocol (as reported)
- • Intervention/exposure: heart rate variability, hrv.
- • Dose/time/duration: abstract doesn’t include enough detail; use the full paper’s methods section.
- • Outcomes: Recovery speed.
- • Replication note: abstracts often omit adherence and timing; confirm details before changing training or supplementation.
Fit
Who it helps, and who should skip it
Who it helps
- • Athletes similar to the study population (participants) working on monitoring.
- • Athletes who can measure Recovery speed with a repeatable workout or time-trial effort.
Who should skip
- • If you have symptoms or conditions that make the intervention risky, get professional guidance.
- • If you’re near race day and can’t safely test, defer the experiment.
Methods
What the study actually did
- • Design: controlled study.
- • Population: participants.
- • Outcomes measured: Recovery speed.
- • Source: PubMed PMID 25029000 (2015) — Journal of strength and conditioning research.
Results excerpt
What the abstract reports
“Raw time to completion and inaccurate shots (points down [PDs]) were recorded and combined to form a match score where lower values indicated superior shooting performance.”
Note: excerpts are short; for full context, read the paper.
Limits
Limitations & bias
- • Abstract-only summaries can miss critical details (population, protocol, adherence, and context).
- • Single studies often don’t generalize to your event, history, and training load; treat results as a starting point.
- • If your context differs (elite vs recreational; cycling vs running), adjust expectations and be conservative.
- • This is performance information, not medical advice.
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