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Five most read articles on the HRV4Training Blog

6/22/2016

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Blog post by Marco Altini

​It's been a bit over a year since we started the HRV4Training Blog. The intent of this blog is to cover and provide educational material on many different aspects of HRV analysis and physiological measurements, as well as to document insights we derive continuously by analyzing our unique dataset. ​Overall, we had about 120 000 page views on the website during the past 12 months:
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Top five

Here is a list of the 5 most read articles of the past 12 months (reads/day were considered only for the period of time the article has been published):
  • Heart rate variability normal values, where we explored the relation between HR and HRV in different subpopulations. A more recent update including data from more users was also recently published at this link. While we are naturally curious about other people's values and these numbers can help getting some perspective, it's important to remember that physiological data is particularly meaningful when analyzed longitudinally within one individual (meaning that you should only look at your own data, after collecting a few months of measurements under the same conditions).
  • Hardware for HRV, what sensor should you use? Where we cover limitations of most (all?) wrist-based optical sensors and show how chest straps are as accurate as ECGs. A broader comment on these aspects can be found on Quora.
  • Heart rate variability using the phone camera. In this post we cover many details of our unique camera-based HRV measurement, showing the same accuracy as a chest strap. Recently we further extended these validations with many trials under different conditions, that will be published soon. Check out the plot below for a nice comparison of ECG and PPG peaks as detected by HRV4Training.
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  • HRV monitoring for strength and power athletes. A guest article by PhD candidate Andrew Flatt, covering important aspects of HRV monitoring outside of what is typically  more discussed in terms of aerobic training.
  • Interpreting HRV trends. In this post, we analyzed years of research from top scientists in the field (mainly Buchheit, Laursen and Plews) and came up with a set of algorithms to automatically detect trends and understand more on the big picture at the individual level, in terms of adaptation to training plans and risk of overtraining or accumulating fatigue. This analysis is present in HRV4Training under Insights / HRV Trends, and subsets of the analysis can be used to follow other recent developments in sports science, such as the works of Vesterinen et al and Flatt et al, discussed here.
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This is a good set of HRV-related topics, ranging from technology to interpretation of trends. So, if you haven't read them yet... happy reading!


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    This blog is curated by
    Marco Altini, founder of HRV4Training


    ​Blog Index
    ​
    The Ultimate Guide to HRV
    1: Measurement setup
    2: Interpreting your data
    3: Case studies and practical examples

    How To
    1. Intro to HRV
    ​2. How to use HRV, the basics
    3. HRV guided training
    ​4. HRV and training load
    ​
    5. HRV, strength & power
    6. Overview in HRV4Training Pro​
    7. HRV in team sports
    ​

    HRV Measurements
    Best Practices

    1. Context & Time of the Day
    2. Duration
    ​
    3. Paced breathing
    4. Orthostatic Test
    5. Slides HRV overview
    6. Normal values and historical data
    ​7. HRV features
    ​
    Data Analysis
    1a. Acute Changes in HRV
    (individual level)

    1b. Acute Changes in HRV (population level)
    ​
    1c. Acute Changes in HRV & measurement consistency
    1d. Acute Changes in HRV in endurance and power sports​
    2a. Interpreting HRV Trends
    2​b. HRV Baseline Trends & CV
    3. ​Tags & Correlations​
    4. Ectopic beats & motion artifacts
    5. HRV4Training Insights
    6. HRV4Training & Sports Science
    7. HRV & fitness / training load
    ​8. HRV & performance
    9. VO2max models
    10. Repeated HRV measurements
    11. VO2max and performance
    12. HR, HRV and performance
    13. Training intensity & performance​
    14. Publication: VO2max & running performance
    ​
    15. Estimating running performance
    16. Coefficient of Variation
    17. More on CV and the big picture
    ​​​​​18. Case study marathon training
    19. Case study injury and lifestyle stress
    20. HRV and menstrual cycle
    21. Cardiac decoupling
    22. FTP, lactate threshold, half and full marathon time estimates
    ​23. Training Monotony
    ​
    Camera & Sensors
    1. ECG vs Polar & Mio Alpha
    2a. Camera vs Polar
    2b. Camera vs Polar iOS10
    2c. iPhone 7+ vs Polar
    2d. Comparison of PPG sensors
    3. Camera measurement guidelines
    4. Validation paper
    ​5. Android camera vs Chest strap
    ​6. Scosche Rhythm24
    ​7. Apple Watch
    8. CorSense
    ​
    9. Samsung Galaxy
    ​
    App Features
    ​1. Features and Recovery Points
    2. Daily advice
    3. HRV4Training insights
    4. Sleep tracking
    5. Training load analysis
    ​6a. Integration with Strava
    6b. Integration with TrainingPeaks
    6c. Integration with SportTracks
    6d. Integration with Genetrainer
    ​
    6e. Integration with Apple Health
    ​
    ​6f. Integration with Todays Plan
    7. Acute HRV changes by sport
    8. Remote tags in HRV4T Coach
    9. VO2max Estimation
    ​
    10. Acute stressors analysis
    11. Training Polarization
    ​
    12. Lactate Threshold Estimation
    13. Functional Threshold Power(FTP) Estimation for cyclists
    14. Aerobic Endurance analysis
    15. Intervals Analysis
    ​​​16. Training Planning
    17. Integration with Oura
    18. Aerobic efficiency and cardiac decoupling
    ​
    Other
    1. HRV normal values​
    ​2. HRV normalization by HR
    ​
    3. HRV 101

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