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Gallery/Higher Intensity Exercises and Movement

Higher intensity distinguishes high impact movements. The exercises in this catalogue increase heart rate and challenge neuromuscular systems with agility and quickness.

Very effective and safe movements for sedentary adults will be lower intensity exercise. When training intensity is too high initially it may lead to injury due to experiencing excessive overload. A study focused on training sedentary adults resulted in a 50% to 90% injury rate within the first 6-weeks. Even programs designed to minimize the risk of injury may encounter overtraining injuries.

Higher intensity exercises that are categorically endurance movements address existing structural deficiencies and may alter body composition. What this means is circuits performed with a high number of repetitions are a superior way to reduce body fat.

GIG Design’s Movement Galleries and Catalogs are categorized by types of movement: balance, coordination, and endurance. Higher intensity is one style of exercise that each movement is tagged by. Additional tags include a graded level of fitness, which body region it’s primarily targeting, and tools or equipment that may be optional or required. Select this link for category and tag definitions within our movement catalog.

One way you might navigate these galleries is to choose one of the three categories, then select from the tag cloud your approximate movement level (beginner, intermediate, advance.) Select one to three movements that diversely work all body regions. Practice based on a set time i.e. 5-minutes to become familiar with the move or as a break in your work day.

BALANCE GALLERY AND TAGS

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COORDINATION GALLERY AND TAGS

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ENDURANCE GALLERY AND TAGS

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REFERENCES

Williford HN, Olson MS, Gauger S, Duey WJ, Blessing DL. Cardiovascular and metabolic costs of forward, backward, and lateral motion. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 1998;30(9):1419-1423.

Lagally KM, Cordero J, Good J, Brown DD, McCaw ST. Physiologic and metabolic responses to a continuous functional resistance exercise workout. J Strength Cond Res. 2009;23(2): 373-379.

Watkins J. Structure and Function of the Musculoskeletal System. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics, 1999.

Jones BH, Cowan DN, Knapik J. Exercise, training, and injuries. Sports Med. 1994;18(3):202-214.