The Role of the Rating-of-Perceived-Exertion Template in Pacing

Int J Sports Physiol Perform. 2018 Mar 1;13(3):367-373. doi: 10.1123/ijspp.2016-0813. Epub 2018 Mar 14.

Abstract

The rating-of-perceived-exertion (RPE) template is thought to regulate pacing and has been shown to be very robust in different circumstances.

Purpose: The primary purpose was to investigate whether the RPE template can be manipulated by changing the race distance during the course of a time trial. The secondary purpose was to study how athletes cope with this manipulation, especially in terms of the RPE template.

Method: Trained male subjects (N = 10) performed 3 cycling time trials: a 10-km (TT10), a 15-km (TT15), and a manipulated 15-km (TTman). During the TTman, subjects started the time trial believing that they were going to perform a 10-km time trial. However, at 7.5 km they were told that it was a 15-km time trial.

Results: A significant main effect of time-trial condition on RPE scores until kilometer 7.5 was found (P = .016). Post hoc comparisons showed that the RPE values of the TT15 were lower than the RPE values of the TT10 (difference 0.60; CI95% 0.11, 1.0) and TTman (difference 0.73; CI95% 0.004, 1.5). After the 7.5 km, a transition phase occurs, in which an interaction effect is present (P = .011). After this transition phase, the RPE values of TTman and TT15 did not statistically differ (P = 1.00).

Conclusions: This novel distance-endpoint manipulation demonstrates that it is possible to switch between RPE templates. A clear shift in RPE during the TTman is present between the RPE templates of the TT10 and TT15. The shift strongly supports suggestions that pacing is regulated using an RPE template.

Keywords: anticipatory model; cycling; fatigue; hazard score; performance; psychobiological model.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Athletes
  • Athletic Performance / physiology*
  • Athletic Performance / psychology*
  • Bicycling / physiology*
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Perception*
  • Physical Exertion*
  • Time Factors