Showing posts with label physical. Show all posts
Showing posts with label physical. Show all posts

How do you define and measure physical fitness?


Aerobic fitness is generally measured quantitatively using one measurement: VO2(max) [1]. This is deemed sufficient for anyone who is a casual athlete or below; you would need more metrics for, say, an olympic athlete or an air force pilot. VO2 is measured as 15*(fraction of resting heart-rate), or



Where HR(rest) is your resting heart-rate, such as 15-20 minutes after you've woken up, before you've started any strenuous exercise. To get to your HR(max), the most common, and easiest, way is to use a treadmill that has a heart-rate monitoring device. 

The treadmill is the best device to use for this because it keeps you at a consistent pace. The general method (off the top of my head) is 
  1. Start off at a pace of 1.5-2mph and 0% incline for 2-3 minutes
  2. After given time, measure heart-rate
  3. Increase incline by 1%
  4. Walk at current pace and incline for 2-3min
  5. Measure HR
  6. Increase pace by 1mph
  7. Walk at current pace and incline for 2-3min
  8. Measure HR
  9. Repeat until you either have to stop or your HR plateaus (be careful not to go above 5% incline - just increase pace)


The idea is to let your heart adjust your heart-rate to compensate for the increased metabolic consumption of oxygen because of your muscles. You stay at the given pace/incline for a few minutes because your HR will jump at first, then slope down to a level that your heart and body is comfortable at. If you want to be absolutely safe and accurate in your measurements you could allow for about 5 minutes per fluctuation, but that would take a long time.

Numbers - There technically isn't any max, but if anybody has a number of above 60 either you did something wrong or your heart can handle a HUGE strain: it would imply that your HR(max) is at least 4 times your HR(rest), which is unlikely unless you're a trained athlete. My number, for instance, is 54, but I train every day and my resting HR is very low. Some athletes can reach 70-80 and above, but they would be world-class (such as olympians).

According to the Wikipedia page, the average VO2 is -

Men (untrained): 45

Women (untrained): 38

Note: If you don't have access to a treadmill, and/or a hear-rate measuring device, I would recommend using a local high school track and measuring your heart-rate with your fingers and a watch.

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VO2...