David Leroy
University of Rouen
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Publication
Featured researches published by David Leroy.
Journal of Sports Sciences | 2006
Ludovic Baudry; David Leroy; Ràgis Thouvarecq; Didier Chollet
Abstract In this study, we examined the effectiveness of auditory concurrent feedback on body segmental alignment during the circle movement performed on a pommel horse. Eighteen gymnasts were assigned to one of two groups: a concurrent auditory feedback group (experimental) or a control group that received no concurrent feedback. After 2 weeks of training (300 circles), the body segmental alignment (BSA) of the experimental group had improved by 2.3% between the pre test (85.7 ± 4.8% BSAmax) and the post test (87.7 ± 4.0% BSAmax). Furthermore, the results of a retention test administered 2 weeks after the post test revealed no decline in performance for the experimental group. No gains in body segmental alignment were found for the control group. It was concluded that augmented auditory feedback made available in real time can be used to correct complex movements, such as the circle movement on a pommel horse, and does not appear to lead to information-dependence despite the frequent administration of feedback. The auditory signal available in real time could help gymnasts to become more objective about their own intrinsic information necessary for the refinement of the circle movement.
Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research | 2009
Eric Gillet; David Leroy; Régis Thouvarecq; Jean François Stein
Gillet, E, Leroy, D, Thouvarecq, R, and Stein, J-F. A notational analysis of elite tennis serve and serve-return strategies on slow surface. J Strength Cond Res 23(2): 532-539, 2009-A notational analysis of singles events at the French Open Grand Slam tournament was undertaken in 2005 and 2006 to characterize the game patterns and strategies of serve and serve-return and to determine their influence on the point issue on a clay court surface. One hundred sixteen mens singles matches were video analyzed. The flat serve (57.6%), particularly down the “T” location (50.3%), allowed servers to win significantly more points than the topspin (24.1%) and slice serves (18.3%). When the topspin was the first serve strategy, servers kept a high percentage of points won from the serve (52.4%). This strategy was essentially used on the second serve (91.6%) by playing the “T” location in the deuce court and the wide zone in the advantage court. Returns to the central zone allowed receivers to win more points (73.3% on first serve and 65.9% on second serve) than plays to external locations. The results highlight the high impact of the first shots of all opponents on the rally. Even on clay, the slowest court surface, serves and serve-returns remain the strokes that most influence the match results in modern tennis games.
Human Movement Science | 2009
Geoffroy Gautier; Ludovic Marin; David Leroy; Régis Thouvarecq
The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of expertise on coordination patterns. We thus tested the coordination dynamics of two groups: experts in the handstand also having high expertise in gymnastics and experts in the handstand but only intermediate expertise in gymnastics. All participants were instructed to track a target with their ankles while maintaining the handstand. The target moved on the anterior-posterior axis according to three frequency conditions: 0.2, 0.4 and 0.6 Hz. The results showed that the suprapostural task was performed better by the group with high gymnastics expertise. Moreover, the spontaneous coordination was specific to the level of gymnastics expertise. We concluded that (i) the dynamics of coordination progress with the overall level of expertise in a sport discipline, independently of the mastery of a single skill, (ii) persistence and change are seen in related movement properties, and (iii) high expertise offers greater adaptability relative to the task.
Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research | 2009
Ludovic Baudry; Chiarella Sforza; David Leroy; Nicola Lovecchio; Geoffroy Gautier; Régis Thouvarecq
Baudry, L, Sforza, C, Leroy, D, Lovecchio, N, Gautier, G, and Thouvarecq, R. Amplitude variables of circle on the pedagogic pommel horse in gymnastics. J Strength Cond Res 23(3): 705-711, 2009-The movement amplitude is a key component of numerous elements in gymnastics. The purpose of the present study is to highlight the most pertinent amplitude variable of the circle performed on the pedagogic pommel horse. Twelve gymnasts (6 expert gymnasts vs. 6 nonexpert gymnasts) performed 10 circles on this event. A Vicon 512 system was used to record the 3-dimensional position of 11 markers fixed on the gymnasts. Our results revealed than 4 amplitude variables permitted us to significantly discriminate the levels of performance of the gymnasts (p < 0.05): shoulder extension in front phase, body alignment, shoulder diameter, and ankle diameter. In a training perspective, this result could help coaches focus their advice and pedagogic situations on the pertinent technical criteria. Then, a stepwise discriminant analysis performed on the 4 previously selected variables showed that 2 variables allowed us to accurately discriminate the circle amplitude: ankle diameter and body alignment. These 2 variables can be used by coaches as a specific index to objectively determine the performance levels of gymnasts and to measure improvement in movements after specific training.
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2016
Thomas Rosenberg; Søren Nørby; Marianne Schwartz; Juliette Saillard; Paulo J. Magalhães; David Leroy; Erik Kann; Morten Duno
PURPOSE In Denmark, the occurrence of Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) has continuously been monitored since 1944. We provide here a summary of 70 years of data collection including registered lines and subjects by the end of 2012. METHODS Affected individuals were identified from a national register of hereditary eye diseases at the National Eye Clinic (NEC), a tertiary low vision rehabilitation center for the entire Danish population. The assembling of LHON pedigrees was based on the reconstruction of published families and newly diagnosed cases from 1980 to 2012 identified in the files of NEC. Genealogic follow-up on the maternal ancestry of all affected individuals was performed to identify a possible relation to an already known maternal line. A full genotypic characterization of the nation-based LHON cohort is provided. RESULTS Forty different lines were identified. The number of live affected individuals with a verified mitochondrial DNA mutation was 104 on January 1, 2013, which translates to a prevalence rate of 1:54,000 in the Danish population. CONCLUSIONS Haplogroup distribution as well as mutational spectrum of the Danish LHON cohort do not deviate from those of other European populations. The genealogic follow-up reveals a relatively high turnover among families with approximately 15 newly affected families per century and the dying out of earlier maternal lines.
Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research | 2010
Eric Gillet; David Leroy; Régis Thouvarecq; Fabrice Mégrot; Jean François Stein
Gillet, E, Leroy, D, Thouvarecq, R, Mégrot, F, and Stein, J-F. Movement-production strategy in tennis: a case study. J Strength Cond Res 24(7): 1942-1947, 2010-The present case study fell within the framework of the “absolute approach of expertise” because it assesses a “truly exceptional individual” (Chi, MTH, Cambridge Handbook of Expertise and Expert Performance, London, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press, 2006, pp. 121-130). This technique analysis examined the movement-production strategy used by a professional tennis player performing serve-return strokes. This research enabled us to establish the relation between tennis serve-return technique and successful performance. An optoelectronic system was used to capture and analyze the expert players stroke production in a live situation to determine the temporal trajectory of the serve-return initiation movement. Some differences between the serve-return shots were observed concerning the occurrence time of the lateral racquet displacement, the amplitude of the racquet movement, and the average latency time. No difference was observed for the gravity center (GC) movements. Backhand, forehand, and reprogramming strokes were executed with a general constancy of occurrence and average times of the GC and racquet movements. This expert player used a predictive movement-production strategy specified by a high level of reproducibility of the movement with nevertheless adaptive skills during reprogramming strokes. This adaptation supported either the development of highly consistent motor programs or the use of a more flexible strategy based on the perception-action coupling.
Perception | 2011
Sami Mecheri; Eric Gillet; Régis Thouvarecq; David Leroy
The spatial-occlusion paradigm makes use of two techniques (masking and removing visual cues) to provide information about the anticipatory cues used by viewers. The visual scene resulting from the removal technique appears to be incongruous, but the assumed equivalence of these two techniques is spreading. The present study was designed to address this issue by combining eye-movement recording with the two types of occlusion (removal versus masking) in a tennis serve – return task. Response accuracy and decision onsets were analysed. The results indicated that subjects had longer reaction times under the removal condition, with an identical proportion of correct responses. Also, the removal technique caused the subjects to rely on atypical search patterns. Our findings suggest that, when the removal technique was used, viewers were unable to systematically count on stored memories to help them accomplish the interception task. The persistent failure to question some of the assumptions about the removal technique in applied visual research is highlighted, and suggestions for continued use of the masking technique are advanced.
Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research | 2008
Ludovic Baudry; Ludovic Seifert; David Leroy
Gymnastics is a closed-skill sport, and the repeatability of a specific technique is accepted as a valuable indicator of a performers level of expertise. The circle movement, defined as a gyrating movement in the horizontal plane, is a key component of all contemporary pommel horse exercises. The aims of this study were to determine the spatial consistency of the circle movement and to assess the influence of expertise on the repeatability of this skill performed on the pedagogic pommel horse. Six expert gymnasts and six nonexperts performed 10 circles on this apparatus. A 3-dimensional analysis system recorded the trajectories of 6 markers fixed on the right and left ankles, hips, and shoulders. The spatiotemporal consistency was assessed by the SD of the marker trajectories during the circle sequence. The results showed that the shoulder and trajectories were more consistent than the ankle trajectory (P < 0.05); the marker trajectories were less consistent in the sagittal plane (P < 0.05); and the expert gymnasts showed better repeatability of the ankle trajectory than the nonexpert gymnasts did (P < 0.05). In this context, the use of the SD of the ankle trajectory during the circle sequence could be an interesting tool for trainers to quantify objectively the positional errors of the legs during circular swings and to measure the improvement in movements after specific training.
Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport | 2004
Laure Lejeune; David I. Anderson; David Leroy; Régis Thouvarecq; François Jouen
Accurate perception of the vertical is critical to spatial orientation, which essential to ensure that behavior isappropriately adapted to the environment. As such, it is surprising that our understanding ofvertical perception and the frames ofreference used to orient oneself in space is less than adequate. This paper attempts to redress this situation by showing a link between experiences influencing posture and the perception ofverticality. This link has implications for understanding how humans perceive the spatial layout of their environment and their relation to that layout. To define an orientation in space, different frames of reference can be selected, with a broad distinction between egocentric (referenced to the participants body) and allocentric (referenced to environmental cues) spatial frames ofreference (for a review,see Wade, 1992). The physical vertical (i.e., the line through the mass centroid of the earth) is considered a primary allocentric reference, whereas the posturalvertical (i.e., the orienta-
Journal of Motor Behavior | 2017
Héloïse Baillet; Régis Thouvarecq; Eric Vérin; Claire Tourny; Nicolas Benguigui; John Komar; David Leroy
ABSTRACT The authors investigated and compared the energy expenditure and postural coordination of two groups of healthy subjects on a mechanical horse at 4 increasing oscillation frequencies. Energy expenditure was assessed from the oxygen consumption, respiratory quotient, and heart rate values, and postural coordination was characterized by relative phase computations between subjects (elbow, head, trunk) and horse. The results showed that the postural coordination of the riders was better adapted (i.e., maintenance of in-phase and antiphase) than that of the nonriders, but the energy expenditure remains the same. Likewise, we observed an energy system shifting only for nonriders (from aerobic to lactic anaerobic mode). Finally, cross-correlations showed a link between energy expenditure and postural coordination in the riders (i.e., effectiveness).