PLoS ONE (Jan 2008)

From Oxford to Hawaii ecophysiological barriers limit human progression in ten sport monuments.

  • François-Denis Desgorces,
  • Geoffroy Berthelot,
  • Nour El Helou,
  • Valérie Thibault,
  • Marion Guillaume,
  • Muriel Tafflet,
  • Olivier Hermine,
  • Jean-François Toussaint

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0003653
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 11
p. e3653

Abstract

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In order to understand the determinants and trends of human performance evolution, we analyzed ten outdoor events among the oldest and most popular in sports history. Best performances of the Oxford-Cambridge boat race (since 1836), the channel crossing in swimming (1875), the hour cycling record (1893), the Elfstedentocht speed skating race (1909), the cross country ski Vasaloppet (1922), the speed ski record (1930), the Streif down-hill in Kitzbühel (1947), the eastward and westward sailing transatlantic records (1960) and the triathlon Hawaii ironman (1978) all follow a similar evolutive pattern, best described through a piecewise exponential decaying model (r(2) = 0.95+/-0.07). The oldest events present highest progression curvature during their early phase. Performance asymptotic limits predicted from the model may be achieved in fourty years (2049+/-32 y). Prolonged progression may be anticipated in disciplines which further rely on technology such as sailing and cycling. Human progression in outdoor sports tends to asymptotic limits depending on physiological and environmental parameters and may temporarily benefit from further technological progresses.