Authors
Anne Hecksteden, Jochen Kraushaar, Friederike Scharhag-Rosenberger, Daniel Theisen, Stephen Senn, Tim Meyer
Publication date
2015/6/15
Source
Journal of applied physiology
Volume
118
Issue
12
Pages
1450-1459
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Description
In the era of personalized medicine, interindividual differences in the magnitude of response to an exercise training program (subject-by-training interaction; “individual response”) have received increasing scientific interest. However, standard approaches for quantification and prediction remain to be established, probably due to the specific considerations associated with interactive effects, in particular on the individual level, compared with the prevailing investigation of main effects. Regarding the quantification of subject-by-training interaction in terms of variance components, confounding sources of variability have to be considered. Clearly, measurement error limits the accuracy of response estimates and thereby contributes to variation. This problem is of particular importance for analyses on the individual level, because a low signal-to-noise ratio may not be compensated by increasing sample size (1 case …
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Scholar articles
A Hecksteden, J Kraushaar, F Scharhag-Rosenberger… - Journal of applied physiology, 2015