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    aerobic decoupling

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    • L Offline
      logger Bronze Member
      last edited by

      I’ve been playing around with the aerobic decoupling S+ app, and while I’m not a professional athlete by any means, it seems like it would still be useful as a kind of fitness test. However, I don’t really understand the data I’m getting: I just came back from a 25km run with a fairly steady pace and HR, and the decoupling app showed less than 5% for almost the entire run, as confirmed also by the graphs in the phone app after the run. But then in the activity overview grid, it shows a 7.1% “aerobic decoupling decouple value”, so I’m trying to understand how to make sense of the two together. That is, where does that 7.1% come from? It’s definitely not the average value for the entire run, and it doesn’t seem to be the highest value recorded either. And even if it’s the highest value, then what is the use of that? There’s a set of steep stairs near my house that I almost always run up at the end of a run, and naturally the value goes up there because of the decrease in pace and increase in HR, but surely those 30 seconds cannot be a useful metric? I’m including a screenshot of today’s run below with pace, HR, and decoupling shown—can anyone help me make sense of this? I use an HR strap. Thanks!

      IMG_0901.PNG

      Francesco PaganoF lexterm77L 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Francesco PaganoF Offline
        Francesco Pagano Silver Members Bronze Member @logger
        last edited by

        @bobson I’m not a pro either, but I can imagine that this app is not perfectly developed yet, especially with the data that SA displays after running an activity with it. I reported something similar about the Running Economy app, some fields seem to be duplicates although showing different values. I’d be more curious to hear from the pro’s how they make use of it during the activity.
        If you want to use Aerobic Decoupling as an indicator of your form, I can suggest analysing it with intervals.icu that allows you also to trim some of the first and last part of an activity; that might be useful for you if you want to exclude, for example, the steps at the end of your run.

        S9PP
        S5

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        • lexterm77L Offline
          lexterm77 Bronze Member @logger
          last edited by

          @logger

          Pro, no pro, beginner, metrics are useful if input is valid. When you have technical terrain, windy conditions, etc, watch will try to filter data to get accurate altitude via gps and baro sensor. Those errors are visible in your graph as decoupling values. If you want to do a test I suggest doing it on a flat terrain without too much windy conditions and if your altitude profile is flat on a watch and in reality you can assume test is valid. Other factors include kinematics that are different when you climb stairs vs run on flat and surface, surface also influences your power but power calculation cannot account for it. Thats why you try to keep all constant (flat terrain, same surface, no wind gusts or large air pressure changes).

          App also does not rely on NGP but pace or power, and power for ascending does not have same efficiency as power for flat running, so you will see decoupling. Grade on which you are climbing have
          Different efficiency factors also.

          If you have a long steady climb, then you could use it as there aren’t many variations while ascending.

          For biking it is same, power/hr does depend if you are pedaling off seat or on seat and at what cadence

          Producing 200W at 60 cadence will have different efficiency than producing 200W at 90.

          Good part about bike decoupling is that you can ignore altitude errors and your output is power meter load cell.
          But when you bike and coast you decoupled your power while your heart is still beating fast, and lo and behold your decoupling values are not correct.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • ? Offline
            A Former User @Brad_Olwin
            last edited by A Former User

            @Brad_Olwin I use it a lot too, but I miss the ability to see other metrics, e.g., pace/power, at the same time and once the activity is over set Z1 and Z2 accordingly if decoupling is in between 3.5-5%

            ? 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • ? Offline
              A Former User @Guest
              last edited by

              @A-Former-User said in aerobic decoupling:

              I miss the ability to see other metrics, e.g., pace/power, at the same time and once the activity is over set Z1 and Z2 accordingly if decoupling is in between 3.5-5%

              I’m voting for this too!

              Mads Hintz-MadsenM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • Mads Hintz-MadsenM Offline
                Mads Hintz-Madsen @Guest
                last edited by

                On the Suunto Race, the “aerobic decoupling” app seems to calculate an estimate of the aerobic coupling instead of decoupling as can be seen from the screenshot below. This is the case both on watch itself and also in the Suunto App. It is not a big issue as the decoupling value is just “100% - coupling”.

                However, as can be seen in the screenshot below then the decoupling (which is actually coupling) figure has a different and wrong average than what is reported in the top of the screenshot. The whole decoupling figure looks strange with the deep periodic dips.

                Note, this is a cycling activity.

                Screenshot_20231214-133333~2.png

                EgikaE Raimo JärviR 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • EgikaE Offline
                  Egika Platinum Member @Mads Hintz-Madsen
                  last edited by

                  @Raimo-Järvi

                  t6, S6, Elementum Terra, Ambit 3 Sapphire, Spartan Ultra Copper, Traverse Alpha, S7 Graphite LE, S9B Ambassador, S9P Granite Blue Titanium, S9PP Titanium Sand, Vertical All Black, Race Titanium Charcoal,
                  Race S All Black - TI Canary - Titanium Courtney

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                  • Raimo JärviR Offline
                    Raimo Järvi @Mads Hintz-Madsen
                    last edited by

                    @Mads-Hintz-Madsen Thank you for the feedback. Decoupling value is obviously wrong as you said, I’m not sure if it’s showing coupling value or if the value is otherwise incorrect. We will investigate it.

                    The value in summary is actually not average, it is the final decoupling value. It should be renamed to e.g. “Final decouple value” to avoid confusion. I guess the thinking behind the summary value is that final value is usually the maximum, of course it depends on your workout. We could add also maximum value to summary.

                    Pragmatic Programmer

                    Mads Hintz-MadsenM lexterm77L 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 4
                    • Mads Hintz-MadsenM Offline
                      Mads Hintz-Madsen @Raimo Järvi
                      last edited by

                      @Raimo-Järvi Thanks for the quick reply and for following up on this issue 😊

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • lexterm77L Offline
                        lexterm77 Bronze Member @Raimo Järvi
                        last edited by

                        @Raimo-Järvi

                        When power output is zero(coasting), does it exclude coupling data with HR?

                        Raimo JärviR 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • Raimo JärviR Offline
                          Raimo Järvi @lexterm77
                          last edited by

                          @lexterm77 When speed AND power are zero, decoupling value is not calculated. When only power is zero, it is calculated. So the answer to your question is no. But maybe it should be excluded, it seems logical to me to exclude coasting.

                          Pragmatic Programmer

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • Raimo JärviR Offline
                            Raimo Järvi
                            last edited by

                            We published an update to Aerobic decoupling app. It fixes a bug in calculating decoupling value for cycling. It also renames summary ‘Decouple value’ to ‘Final decoupling’ for clarity and adds ‘Max decoupling’ to summary.

                            Zero power / coasting is not excluded from decoupling calculation yet, we will fix that and publish another update.

                            Pragmatic Programmer

                            Mads Hintz-MadsenM 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 4
                            • Mads Hintz-MadsenM Offline
                              Mads Hintz-Madsen @Raimo Järvi
                              last edited by Mads Hintz-Madsen

                              @Raimo-Järvi great! Thx for the quick response 😊

                              I will try it out as soon as I can.

                              EDIT: Btw, I don’t understand the reasoning for wanting to exclude coasting/zero power from the calculations.

                              Why should zero power be treated differently than e.g. soft pedalling at 1 Watt? I believe that aerobic decoupling metric is using normalized power (NP) which is already dealing gracefully with periods of low power output such as 0 or e.g. 1 Watt.

                              lexterm77L 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • Mads Hintz-MadsenM Offline
                                Mads Hintz-Madsen @Raimo Järvi
                                last edited by

                                @Raimo-Järvi I did an inside Zwift cycling activity using the updated aerobic decoupling app.

                                I have included screenshots below of the decoupling data shown in Suunto App. It seems like the final decoupling value (6.4%) in the first screenshot now makes sense.

                                However, I don’t think that the max decoupling value (15.4%) provides any useful information. This is the maximum instantaneous (i.e. calculated using instantaneous power and heart rate) decoupling value which could even be 100% by simply stopping pedalling, i.e., power goes to zero (I forgot to actually try). So I believe that the max. value can be whatever value from activity to activity and is not really worth tracking. This may confuse some people.

                                The second screenshot shows the instantaneous decoupling (which can be both positive and negative as can also be seen). And here I believe that the average decoupling value (4.0%) is just the average of the instantaneous decoupling. This average will in general be different from the final decoupling value. I assume that the average and final decoupling value will be close if the ride is done at more or less constant power or heart rate.

                                Final remark (or advice to any users of this metric) is that the aerobic decoupling metric only really makes (scientific) sense if the activity is performed at constant power or heart rate as the metric measures changes in the power-to-heartrate ratio. This is not a linear relationship so the metric will lose its meaning if there are big fluctuations in e.g. power.

                                I’m not sure that I will be using this S+ app much but after the latest update, the calculations seem to be correct. Thanks for that!!!

                                Sorry for rambling on! I’ll go to sleep now 😉

                                Screenshot_20231219-215132.png Screenshot_20231219-215157.png

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                                • lexterm77L Offline
                                  lexterm77 Bronze Member @Mads Hintz-Madsen
                                  last edited by

                                  EDIT: Btw, I don’t understand the reasoning for wanting to exclude coasting/zero power from the calculations.

                                  Because your heart continues to beat even when you stop power output. So HR data is no longer “coupled” or relevant to a calculation. If you include it by doing 0 watt power output and your heart still beating, you are invalidating coupling calculation.

                                  Mads Hintz-MadsenM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • Mads Hintz-MadsenM Offline
                                    Mads Hintz-Madsen @lexterm77
                                    last edited by Mads Hintz-Madsen

                                    @lexterm77 hmm, I’m still not sure I get why 0W needs a special handling compared to say 1W.

                                    The decoupling equation uses normalized power (NP) calculated from the entire activity. NP effectively de-weights periods with low power output such as 0 W. That is why I think that 0 W values (or other relativity low power values) do not need to be excluded from the metric as NP gracefully handles periods with lower power. That is why NP was invented in the first place.

                                    But maybe the thinking/assumption is that you pedal at either approx. constant power or that you are coasting at 0W and that is why it is being proposed to do special handling of exactly 0W.

                                    lexterm77L Raimo JärviR 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • lexterm77L Offline
                                      lexterm77 Bronze Member @Mads Hintz-Madsen
                                      last edited by lexterm77

                                      @Mads-Hintz-Madsen

                                      Normalized power is for calculating your overall effort. Not useful in testing of aerobic threshold. If you go to a lab, they will tell you never, i mean not even for a second to stop pedaling. This is why aerobic threshold tests are not really valid if you do 30min effort then pause 2 minutes then resume. Your anaerobic or oxygen debt or epoc will be refilled and whole teat goes into trash bin. Just go to any lab and ask. They will tell you you need nearly constant effort for 60min to get a valid test.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • Raimo JärviR Offline
                                        Raimo Järvi @Mads Hintz-Madsen
                                        last edited by

                                        @Mads-Hintz-Madsen Thank you for testing!

                                        Aerobic decoupling app doesn’t use normalized power, it currently uses 5 minute rolling average of power and HR values for calculating decoupling value (for cycling). This is also the value shown in Suunto app graph.

                                        Pragmatic Programmer

                                        Mads Hintz-MadsenM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                        • Mads Hintz-MadsenM Offline
                                          Mads Hintz-Madsen @Raimo Järvi
                                          last edited by Mads Hintz-Madsen

                                          @Raimo-Järvi Thanks for clarifying!

                                          How is the final decoupling value (listed in the summary) calculated? Is that calculation using the average power and average heartrate over the entire activity (excluding warmup/baseline periods)?

                                          In the Suunto App graph, there is an average decoupling value which is different from the final decoupling value. I assume that this average then is the average of the rolling 5-minute decoupling values.

                                          Raimo JärviR 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • Raimo JärviR Offline
                                            Raimo Järvi @Mads Hintz-Madsen
                                            last edited by

                                            @Mads-Hintz-Madsen “Final decoupling” is value from last 5 minutes. I guess the name is not very descriptive, app description in SuuntoPlus store should also be updated.

                                            Suunto app graph calculates average of all values during the workout, in this case the values are decoupling values from rolling 5 min average. And since the graph includes 10 min warmup and 10 min baseline calculation, those zero values are included in the average. I guess first 20 minutes should not be included in data, or in calculating the average 🤔

                                            Pragmatic Programmer

                                            Mads Hintz-MadsenM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
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