F. J. Nagle
University of Colorado Boulder
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by F. J. Nagle.
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 1983
Henry J. Montoye; Richard A. Washburn; Stephen Servais; Andrew C. Ertl; John G. Webster; F. J. Nagle
A small portable accelerometer was developed to estimate the energy expenditure of daily activities. The accelerometer is reported to be an improvement over movement counters currently on the market. The oxygen requirement of 14 different activities was measured in 21 subjects while each wore the accelerometer on the waist. A movement counter (mercury switch), which is available commercially, was also worn on the waist and another was worn on the left wrist. The reproducibility of the accelerometer readings was high (4 subjects, 14 activities; r = 0.94) and was superior to either the waist movement counter (r = 0.63) or the wrist movement counter (r = 0.74). In estimating oxygen requirement (VO2) the standard error of estimate, based on 21 subjects and 14 activities, was 6.6 ml X min-1 X kg-1 for the accelerometer. This was also better (smaller) than for the waist movement counter (9.2 ml X min-1 X kg-1) or for the wrist movement counter (7.9 ml X min-1 X kg-1).
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 1987
David R. Bassett; F. J. Nagle; Swapan Mookerjee; Kevin C. Darr; Alexander V. Ng; Stephen G. Voss; Jerome P. Napp
We examined the physiological responses to skin wetting during a 120-min level treadmill run to assess whether skin wetting would reduce the dehydration and the increase in core temperature associated with prolonged exercise. Testing was conducted in an environmental chamber (T = 29.5 degrees C, wind velocity = 3 m X sec-1) under two different humidity conditions (33 or 66% relative humidity). Ten male subjects performed two runs in each humidity condition; one served as a control run. The other included spraying the body with 50 ml of water (T = 29.5 degrees C) every 10 min. Spraying had no effect on rectal temperature (Tre), heart rate, oxygen consumption, perceived exertion, sweat loss, or percent change in plasma volume in both the humid and the dry conditions. Spraying produced a significant reduction in mean skin temperature (Tsk), which increased the (Tre - Tsk) gradient. At the same time, overall skin conductance (K) was decreased, presumably as a result of cutaneous vasoconstriction due to the low Tsk. Since heat transfer from the bodys core to the skin is expressed by the equation: heat transfer = K X (Tre - Tsk) the spraying had no effect on heat transfer away from the core, and Tre remained unchanged.
Journal of Applied Physiology | 1983
Seals Dr; R. A. Washburn; P. G. Hanson; P. L. Painter; F. J. Nagle
Journal of Applied Physiology | 1994
Alexander V. Ng; James C. Agre; P. Hanson; M. S. Harrington; F. J. Nagle
Journal of Applied Physiology | 1987
Alexander V. Ng; P. Hanson; E. A. Aaron; R. B. Demment; Jason Conviser; F. J. Nagle
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 1981
J. H. Mitchell; C. G. Blomqvist; A. R. Lind; B. Saltin; J. T. Shepherd; F. J. Nagle; Michael L. Pollock; Donald H. Schmidt
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 1990
Alexander V. Ng; James C. Agre; F. J. Nagle
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 1986
David R. Bassett; F. J. Nagle; Swapan Mookerjee; Kevin C. Darr; Alexander V. Ng; S. G. Voss; J. P. Napp
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 1985
Alexander V. Ng; E. A. Aaron; R. B. Demment; F. J. Nagle; J. M. Convisor
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 1982
Henry J. Montoye; John G. Webster; Richard A. Washburn; Stephen Servais; Andrew C. Ertl; F. J. Nagle