HIIT vs. Steady State vs. Aerobic Intervals - which is best?
AnvilHead
Posts: 18,343 Member
https://www.acefitness.org/continuing-education/certified/research-special-issue-2017/6300/ace-sponsored-research-hiit-vs-steady-state-training/
^ A study sponsored by the ACE (American Council on Exercise), conducted by researchers in the Department of Exercise Sport Science at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse. Previously sedentary, beginner trainers were stratified into three groups for an 8-week study. One group performed steady state cardio, one performed Tabata (HIIT) intervals and one did moderate intensity aerobic intervals.
All three groups experienced significant improvements in VO2max, power output and exercise capacity. The individual stats/graphs are laid out in the study, but the tl;dr version is that the changes were largely statistically identical between groups.
An interesting and noteworthy discussion takes place as to the "Enjoyment Scale" of exercise, postulating that personal preference should be taken into consideration (personality and goals of the individual) when selecting an exercise modality. As has often been discussed in exercise threads here, the "best" workout is the one you'll actually do - and continue to do. Here is an excerpt from the discussion regarding enjoyment scale and adherence (emphasis added):
^ A study sponsored by the ACE (American Council on Exercise), conducted by researchers in the Department of Exercise Sport Science at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse. Previously sedentary, beginner trainers were stratified into three groups for an 8-week study. One group performed steady state cardio, one performed Tabata (HIIT) intervals and one did moderate intensity aerobic intervals.
All three groups experienced significant improvements in VO2max, power output and exercise capacity. The individual stats/graphs are laid out in the study, but the tl;dr version is that the changes were largely statistically identical between groups.
An interesting and noteworthy discussion takes place as to the "Enjoyment Scale" of exercise, postulating that personal preference should be taken into consideration (personality and goals of the individual) when selecting an exercise modality. As has often been discussed in exercise threads here, the "best" workout is the one you'll actually do - and continue to do. Here is an excerpt from the discussion regarding enjoyment scale and adherence (emphasis added):
One day during each week of the eight-week program, study participants completed the Exercise Enjoyment Scale (EES) (Stanley, Williams and Cumming, 2010). The EES was administered before, during and after training to determine the subject’s perceived level of enjoyment (on a scale of 0 to 7).
The major finding was that the EES declined progressively across the duration of the study for all three groups. Additionally, the EES was lowest during the most intense training scheme (i.e., the Tabata Group). Stated simply, the subjects were significantly less likely to enjoy the most intense training protocol, and their enjoyment of all of the protocols declined over time.
Tabata-type protocols (very high-intensity intervals with very short recovery periods) are so physically challenging that they are unlikely to be perceived as pleasant. Regardless of how effective an exercise training program might be, adherence over any meaningful period of time is unlikely in programs that are not enjoyable.
The fact that the participants’ level of enjoyment was declining over the course of the study in all three training groups should be highly concerning to health and fitness professionals, as it is likely that most of these newcomers to exercise would drop out of their programs in the coming weeks if their enjoyment of exercise continued to wane (and it is certainly possible that being part of a research study is all that kept some of them on board). Given that dropout is a primary concern for all new clients, identifying the most enjoyable program, rather than the most effective one, could be an important focus of future research.
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Great study/article/post. This should be added to the Most Helpful Posts thread.4
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Thank you for this! I've often wondered if my chosen forms of exercise were "intense" enough to be useful. Sounds like the important thing is that I'm still doing them after a couple of years13
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Lol, some people used to laugh at my ACE certification. Having access to all the articles, I should go back and post some of the more interesting ones like this.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
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Thank you for this! I've often wondered if my chosen forms of exercise were "intense" enough to be useful. Sounds like the important thing is that I'm still doing them after a couple of years
Bottom line is that if it's sustainable and is helping you toward your desired goals, it's useful.3 -
Good study overall, and no doubt the exercise people continue to do will reap the most benefits over time. It would be interesting to see if the results were similar in people with higher training levels.
A couple things do stand out to me though, those being the significant IMO change in aerobic power, and the slight decrease in blood lactate in the Tabata group. I also find the breakdown of the weights in the mens group rather strange, as it seems almost as if they biased the heaviest men towards the steady state, the middleweights to the Tabata, and the lighter weights to the Meyer intervals.
As for the enjoyment ratings, to me it seems a good indication that people get bored doing the same thing over and over regardless of what it is. And while I won't speak for others, that applies to me. If I don't mix it up some I find it just turns into a blah fest regardless.3 -
bump-1
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I like to keep trying new things.0
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I think that all training intensities have a place in a balanced training program.
HIIT is a very powerful training stimulus. The benefits on fitness improvement cannot be denied.
However, one of my peeviest pet peeves about the overhyping of HIIT is when it is marketed as an “easy” way to fit exercise into a busy schedule.
I just saw another ad recently that started off with “one of the reasons people find it hard to stick with an exercise program is the time commitment...wouldn’t you love to be able to get fit and healthy in just minutes a day?” And then it into some blahblahblah about a one minute workout.
It’s just dishonest.6 -
I'm sure HIIT has plenty benefits but I don't care for it. I just gave it a good try, couple times a week for 8-9 weeks and one day I was just like why am I still doing this.1
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I like all of them, they help vary my routine.6
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One thing I note, the article seems to dismiss the 50% time savings of the Tabata workouts for the same results by saying the need for extra recovery time negates that advantage, however, if we're talking about beginners going to the gym, there's going to be an extra amount of time used beyond the workout for travel, changing clothes, etc, regardless of type of workout. Unless they are saying the Tabata participants are so wiped they can't even get up and walk to their car for 10 or more minutes, the increased recovery time for HIIT would overlap with the secondary time expenditure inherent in any training program... so they would still take up less time overall out of a typical person's day.2
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I love HIIT. Usually do it after my upper body day workouts1
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PetiteHabanero wrote: »I like all of them, they help vary my routine.
Me too. Keeps things interesting and I find I'll stay with it if I mix thing up a bit. It can also be fun to experiment on yourself :-)3 -
Why was my bump flagged on this thread? Does someone think it means something derogatory?2
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Lol, some people used to laugh at my ACE certification. Having access to all the articles, I should go back and post some of the more interesting ones like this.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
ACE was my second cert after I graduated college and had my board cert with NATA. I actually thought the ACE program itself was well structured and worthy. ASCM recognition was always the gold standard, but I don't think they had a personal training certification until after 2000, and I was just moving out of the field to computers again.0 -
I think that all training intensities have a place in a balanced training program.
HIIT is a very powerful training stimulus. The benefits on fitness improvement cannot be denied.
However, one of my peeviest pet peeves about the overhyping of HIIT is when it is marketed as an “easy” way to fit exercise into a busy schedule.
I just saw another ad recently that started off with “one of the reasons people find it hard to stick with an exercise program is the time commitment...wouldn’t you love to be able to get fit and healthy in just minutes a day?” And then it into some blahblahblah about a one minute workout.
It’s just dishonest.
It's not dishonest- it IS an easy way to fit fitness into a busy schedule.
I think it's dishonest to say you're going to get "fit and healthy" in just minutes a day - but it IS true- HIIT helps you get cardio work in to your life in an efficient time saving manner. I can do a workout while a cake bakes- AND shower before it's done. - like- that's not going to happen with 45 min of steady state fasted work.
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Interesting article, basically - do something.
Personally I like variety, so prefer a HIIT or Interval, BUT, I need steady state endurance as well, so have to include it in my training plan (despite my dislike of it LOL).3 -
Good article... it’s always been my opinion, something is better than nothing. Might as well do something you enjoy.1
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SurfyPants wrote: »PetiteHabanero wrote: »I like all of them, they help vary my routine.
I do HIIT 2-3 times a week and really enjoy it.
I enjoy HIIT too! What do you like to do?0 -
PetiteHabanero wrote: »I like all of them, they help vary my routine.
Me too. Keeps things interesting and I find I'll stay with it if I mix thing up a bit. It can also be fun to experiment on yourself :-)
Very true indeed!0 -
To me this is a good better best argument. Having some activity is good, doing something with regularity is better, doing a tailored program best suited for your goals is best. To me, "being fit" is not a goal, as it lacks specificity.
I would be better off doing crossfit or the sort for my regular mountaineering objectives is certainly better than nothing, but trying to do technical climbing on a glacier over 20,000' this summer hiit alone is not going to get me there.
Articles as the one linked are logical, the general population is out of shape and if you lack a clear and specific objective , doing something over nothing is great.
Otherwise, I live by Jan olbrecht's advice, veering from the program for entertainment purposes is not a valid reason to veer from the program.1 -
ronocnikral wrote: »To me this is a good better best argument. Having some activity is good, doing something with regularity is better, doing a tailored program best suited for your goals is best. To me, "being fit" is not a goal, as it lacks specificity.
I would be better off doing crossfit or the sort for my regular mountaineering objectives is certainly better than nothing, but trying to do technical climbing on a glacier over 20,000' this summer hiit alone is not going to get me there.
Articles as the one linked are logical, the general population is out of shape and if you lack a clear and specific objective , doing something over nothing is great.
Otherwise, I live by Jan olbrecht's advice, veering from the program for entertainment purposes is not a valid reason to veer from the program.
Performance goals override everything else.1 -
Good article... it’s always been my opinion, something is better than nothing. Might as well do something you enjoy.Good article... it’s always been my opinion, something is better than nothing. Might as well do something you enjoy.Good article... it’s always been my opinion, something is better than nothing. Might as well do something you enjoy.Good article... it’s always been my opinion, something is better than nothing. Might as well do something you enjoy.Good article... it’s always been my opinion, something is better than nothing. Might as well do something you enjoy.
I love HIIT because I can change it up every time. Also, I spend so much of my time lifting that I need to do a quick cardio.1 -
Lol, some people used to laugh at my ACE certification. Having access to all the articles, I should go back and post some of the more interesting ones like this.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
ACE was my second cert after I graduated college and had my board cert with NATA. I actually thought the ACE program itself was well structured and worthy. ASCM recognition was always the gold standard, but I don't think they had a personal training certification until after 2000, and I was just moving out of the field to computers again.
ACSM had a Personal Training cert starting in the mid-1990s (I got one in 1998), but it wasn’t a very good program at the start. In those days, training and even resistance exercise were not really an important part of the ACSM approach (my observation at the time).
It’s better now.
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Note the study participants were initially not active. If you are even an amateur-not-super-competitive-do-it-for-fun endurance athlete you want a mix of long aerobic and high intensity as part of your plan (and if hours are limited... middle intensity too). And it happens to be more fun because you mix it up.
So...it shouldn't be an either/or thing. It should be a when and how much thing.1
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