Purpose: When measuring isometric contractions, providing real-time visual feedback is different from the general clinical environment. In addition, despite the fact that men and women have clear physical and physiological differences, most of the existing studies analyzed absolute muscle contractions with no distinction between men and women after measuring absolute muscle contraction. Hip extension force was measured without visual feedback, and absolute and normalized contraction forces were analyzed separately. Reproducibility was confirmed through intra-trial reliability.
Methods: Maximum voluntary contraction (MVC) was measured, and submaximal forces were additionally measured at three different intensities (75%, 50%, and 25% of MVC) in random order.
Results: Absolute contraction forces measured at four target intensities were significantly greater in men. Intra-trial reliability of contraction forces across 3 trials was very high in both men and women. There was a significant difference in normalized forces at 75%, 50%, and 25% of MVC between the sexes.
Conclusion: Normalized force close to the target intensity was measured at high-intensity for men and low-intensity for women. In submaximal intensities, a decrease in normalized force smaller than the assigned target intensity occurred in both men and women as the target intensity decreased, with men showing a smaller decrease proportionally.