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Section 5.2

The core is defined by the structures that make up the:

Lumbo-pelvic-hip complex (LPHC)

Which phase of the stretch-shortening cycle involves storing elastic energy and stimulating muscle spindles?

Eccentric phase

For clients with an anterior pelvic tilt, which modality should be minimized or used with emphasis on flexibility for hip flexors?

Bicycles or steppers

The principle of specificity, also known as the SAID principle, describes:

The body's responses and adaptations to exercise

An exercise training session should include which phases?

Warm-up, conditioning, cool-down

In Cardiorespiratory Training Zone 1, the metabolic marker is:

Below VT1

Balance training progression 3 exercises are designed to develop:

Proper deceleration ability

Which of the following is one of the three key senses involved in the balance mechanism?

Vestibular senses

Which of the following is an example of a Plyometric training progression 3 exercise?

Ice skaters (skater jumps)

Which principle states that the body becomes stronger by adapting to new demands placed on it, through progressive and systematic exercise?

Progressive overload

An unstable (yet controllable) exercise environment that causes the body to use its internal balance and stabilization mechanisms is a:

Proprioceptively enriched environment

Cardiorespiratory fitness is defined as the ability of the cardiovascular and respiratory systems to supply oxygen-rich blood to skeletal muscles during:

Sustained physical activity

Core training is critical for improving posture, enhancing performance, increasing injury resistance, and:

Accelerating injury rehabilitation

What is the recommended range for low to moderate training intensities for Power adaptation, when using weights?

~30-45% 1RM

An example of an exercise in Balance training progression 1 is:

Single-leg balance

What is the training variable for 'frequency' in aerobic activity recommendations for vigorous-intensity exercise?

At least 3 days per week

The ability to produce and maintain force production for prolonged periods of time is:

Muscular endurance

Maintaining balance within a stationary limit of stability, but with a moving base of support, is what type of balance?

Semi-dynamic balance

Adults should accumulate how many minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic activity per week?

150 minutes

Which training adaptation is associated with a repetition range of ~6-12 or higher and moderate to high sets (~3-6 sets)?

Muscular hypertrophy

Fitness professionals should provide programming that requires movement in all three planes of motion. These planes are:

Sagittal, frontal, transverse

Which of the following is an example of an exercise for Core training progression 3?

Medicine ball soccer throw

The last progression in resistance training focuses on the adaptation of muscular:

Power

Which of the following can cause muscle imbalance?

Cumulative trauma

When spotting dumbbells, a Certified Personal Trainer is encouraged to spot at the client's:

Wrists

Which OPT model phase focuses on increasing maximal strength by lifting heavy loads?

Phase 4 Maximal Strength Training

When designing a core training program, what should be emphasized initially to increase proprioceptive demand?

Increasing proprioceptive demand

Speed is defined as the velocity of movement in a given direction, and it is the product of:

Stride rate and stride length

Which of the following is NOT one of the five components of health-related physical fitness?

Agility

When developing a balance training program, it is important to emphasize a safe and progressive increase in:

Proprioceptive demand

Which of the following is an example of a local core muscle?

Transverse abdominis

What is the recommended recovery time between intense plyometric training sessions for novice individuals?

48-72 hours

Which of the following is an example of a global core muscle?

Iliopsoas

Maintaining ideal posture places a client's body in the most optimal state to perform movement patterns safely and effectively. This is crucial for:

Optimal movement execution

Which term refers to the ability to react to a stimulus and appropriately change the motion of the body in response to that stimulus?

Quickness

Local core muscles generally attach:

On or near the vertebrae

Bracing refers to contracting which muscles at the same time?

Global abdominals like rectus abdominis and obliques

The area within which an individual can move one's center of gravity without changing the base of support is called:

Limits of stability

Which of these is an example of a Balance training progression 2 exercise?

Single-leg squat

SAQ training benefits include:

Improved top speed and acceleration rate

The FITTE-VP principle for cardiorespiratory exercise includes which variables?

Frequency, intensity, type, time, enjoyment, volume, progression

Sensory receptors sensitive to change in length of the muscle and the rate of that change are called:

Muscle spindles

Plyometric volume is expressed as the number of:

Foot contacts, throws, or catches

Static stretching involves passively taking a muscle to the point of tension and holding for a minimum of how many seconds?

30 seconds

SAQ training for youth has been found to:

Decrease the likelihood of athletic injury

Proper alignment of the lead leg and pelvis during sprinting, including ankle dorsiflexion, knee flexion, hip flexion, and a neutral pelvis, is known as:

Frontside mechanics

The ability of an individual to control the position of the center of gravity over the base of support is the definition of:

Balance

Which type of resistance training focuses on greater demands on core stability and proprioception, progressing from bilateral to unilateral movements?

Stabilization-focused exercises

Performing two exercises in rapid succession with minimal rest is a characteristic of:

Superset

Balance training has been shown to reduce the risk of falls in which population?

Healthy older adults

Active stretching involves using agonists and synergists to dynamically move the joint into a ROM, holding for how many seconds and repeating how many repetitions?

1-2 seconds, 5-10 repetitions

The goal of Phase 3 Muscular Development Training is:

To achieve maximal muscle growth or altered body composition

Performing one set of each exercise describes which resistance training system?

Single set

Stage 1 cardiorespiratory training is designed for apparently healthy sedentary clients and involves steady-state aerobic exercise at what intensity?

Below ventilatory threshold 1 (VT1)

Core training progression 1 exercises primarily target:

Local core muscles with little spinal motion

Which of the following describes the ability of the neuromuscular system to produce the greatest possible force in the shortest possible time?

Power

A variation of circuit training that alternates upper and lower body exercises throughout the set is:

Peripheral heart action

The ability to start (or accelerate), stop (or decelerate and stabilize), and change direction while maintaining postural control is:

Agility

Plyometric training benefits include:

Improved bone mineral density and soft tissue strength

The primary goal of Phase 1 Stabilization Endurance Training in the OPT model is to:

Improve movement patterns and stability

According to the integrated performance paradigm, to move with precision, forces must be loaded (eccentrically), stabilized (isometrically), and then:

Accelerated (concentrically)

The ability of the nervous system to recruit the correct muscles, produce force, reduce force, and dynamically stabilize the body's structure in all three planes of motion is called:

Neuromuscular efficiency

Global core muscles primarily act to:

Move the trunk and transfer loads

The process by which neural impulses that sense tension are greater than the impulses that cause muscles to contract, providing an inhibitory effect to the muscle spindles, is known as:

Autogenic inhibition

An example of a Core training progression 2 exercise is:

Cable rotation

How bones and joints are moving through a range of motion is described by:

Osteokinematics

SAQ training promotes improvements in physical performance and sustains youthful movement by stimulating which adaptations?

Muscular, neurological, connective tissue, cardiovascular

A Stage 2 cardiorespiratory workout consists of:

Recovery intervals below VT1 and work intervals above VT1

Which of the following is an acute variable for training?

Repetition tempo

A maneuver used to recruit the local core stabilizers by drawing in the navel toward the spine is called the:

Drawing-in maneuver

A characteristic of Cardiorespiratory Training Zone 3 is:

Vigorous to very hard, profuse sweating

Which core exercise progression focuses on improving the rate of force production and movement efficiency of the core musculature and extremities?

Core training progression 3

A benefit of flexibility training is:

Increased joint range of motion

Which stage of the GAS model is characterized by fatigue, joint stiffness, or delayed onset muscle soreness?

Alarm reaction stage

The ability to feel changes in pressure on the skin, muscle length, and joint angles is known as:

Somatosensation

Plyometric intensity describes the amount of effort or stress applied by the muscles, connective tissue, and joints during drills and by the:

Distance covered (height of a jump)

A set performed to failure, then removing a small percentage of the load and continuing with the set, is which training system?

Drop set

Normal extensibility of all soft tissues allowing complete ROM of a joint:

Flexibility

Mechanical specificity refers to the:

Weight and movements placed on the body

What is the primary goal of Phase 5 Power Training?

Increase maximal strength and rate of force production

The General Adaptation Syndrome (GAS) model outlines three stages of response to stress: alarm reaction, resistance development, and:

Exhaustion

Consistently repeating the same pattern of motion over long periods of time that can lead to dysfunction or injury is:

Pattern overload

The time between the eccentric and concentric phases in a plyometric exercise is known as the:

Amortization phase

When monitoring cardiorespiratory exercise intensity, which method uses percentages of maximal heart rate?

HRmax

An example of a Power-focused resistance exercise is:

Medicine ball throws

When spotting a barbell squat, the spotter should be positioned:

Behind the lifter, arms under armpits

In Phase 2 Strength Endurance Training, an example superset for the chest could be:

Bench press followed by a push-up

Exercises that typically require heavier loads than stabilization-focused resistance exercises, aiming to increase muscle size and strength, are:

Strength-focused exercises

Plyometric exercises increase:

Rate of force production and motor unit recruitment

Plyometric training progression 2 involves jumps with more amplitude and dynamic motion, performed in a repetitive fashion with a:

Moderate, repeating tempo

Balance training progression 1 exercises initially involve:

Little joint motion of the balance leg

Plyometric training is a form of exercise that uses explosive movements to develop:

Muscular power

When introducing plyometric exercises to new clients, movements should initially involve small jumps and clients should hold the landing position for how long?

3-5 seconds

Which of the following describes the training variable 'progression' in core training?

Little or no motion of spine to explosive trunk movements

The Human Movement System (HMS) comprises which three systems?

Muscular, skeletal, nervous

A specialized sensory receptor located at the point where skeletal muscle fibers insert into the tendons, sensitive to changes in muscular tension, is the:

Golgi tendon organ

Which cardiorespiratory training stage involves interval training integrating all four training zones?

Stage 4

The combined training of flexibility, cardiorespiratory, core, balance, plyometric, SAQ, and resistance training into one system is known as:

Integrated training

A neuromuscular phenomenon where synergists take over function for a weak or inhibited prime mover (agonist) is known as:

Synergistic dominance

The process in which the Human Movement System seeks the path of least resistance during functional movements is called:

Relative flexibility

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