J
Jeroen Swart
Researcher at University of Cape Town
Publications - 55
Citations - 1615
Jeroen Swart is an academic researcher from University of Cape Town. The author has contributed to research in topics: Time trial & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 51 publications receiving 1301 citations. Previous affiliations of Jeroen Swart include Stellenbosch University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Previous experience influences pacing during 20 km time trial cycling
TL;DR: Pacing is influenced by an interaction between feedback and previous experience, and Conscious cognitive processes that lead to ratings of perceived exertion and pacing appear to be influenced by previous experience.
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Heart rate recovery as a guide to monitor fatigue and predict changes in performance parameters
TL;DR: It is suggested that HRR has the potential to monitor changes in endurance performance and contribute to a more accurate prescription of training load in well‐trained and elite cyclists.
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Exercising with reserve: evidence that the central nervous system regulates prolonged exercise performance
Jeroen Swart,Robert P. Lamberts,Mike Lambert,A. St Clair Gibson,Estelle V. Lambert,Justin Skowno,Timothy D. Noakes +6 more
TL;DR: The ingestion of a centrally acting stimulant allowed subjects to exercise for longer at higher cardiorespiratory and metabolic stress indicating the presence of a muscular reserve in the natural state, suggesting that endurance performance is not only “limited” by mechanical failure of the exercising muscles.
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Changes in heart rate recovery after high-intensity training in well-trained cyclists
TL;DR: HRR is a sensitive marker which tracks changes in training status in already well-trained cyclists and has the potential to have an important role in monitoring and prescribing training.
Journal ArticleDOI
Exercising with reserve: exercise regulation by perceived exertion in relation to duration of exercise and knowledge of endpoint
Jeroen Swart,Robert P. Lamberts,Mike Lambert,Estelle V. Lambert,Richard William Woolrich,Susan Johnston,Timothy D. Noakes +6 more
TL;DR: Examination of ratings of perceived exertion (RPE) and performance during repetitive maximal effort 40 km time trials as well as after an intervention that aimed to decrease certainty about the remaining distance of the exercise bout associated with a more aggressive RPE strategy that produces a superior exercise performance.