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Optimal Pacing of a Cyclist in a Time Trial Based on Individualized Models of Fatigue and Recovery

This paper formulates optimal pacing of a cyclist on hilly terrain time-trials as a minimum-time optimal control problem. Maximal power of a cyclist serves as a time-varying constraint and depends on fatigue and recovery which are captured via dynamic models proposed early in the paper. Experimental...

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Published in:arXiv.org 2021-10
Main Authors: Ashtiani, Faraz, Vijay Sarthy M Sreedhara, Ardalan Vahidi, Hutchison, Randolph, Mocko, Gregory
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Vijay Sarthy M Sreedhara
Ardalan Vahidi
Hutchison, Randolph
Mocko, Gregory
description This paper formulates optimal pacing of a cyclist on hilly terrain time-trials as a minimum-time optimal control problem. Maximal power of a cyclist serves as a time-varying constraint and depends on fatigue and recovery which are captured via dynamic models proposed early in the paper. Experimental protocols for identifying the individualized parameters of the proposed fatigue and recovery models are detailed and results for six human subjects are shown. In an analytical treatment via necessary conditions of Pontryagin Minimum Principle, we show that the cyclist's optimal power in a time-trial is limited to only four modes of all-out, coasting, pedaling at a critical power, or constant speed (bang-singular-bang). To determine when to switch between these modes, we resort to numerical solution via dynamic programming. One of the subjects is then simulated on four courses including the 2019 Duathlon National Championship in Greenville, SC. The dynamic programming simulation results show 24% reduction in travel time over experimental results of the self-paced subject who is a competitive amateur cyclist. The paper concludes with description of a pilot lab experiment in which the subject trial time was reduced by 3% when the near-optimal pace was communicated to her in real-time.
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subjects Computer simulation
Dynamic models
Dynamic programming
Fatigue
Optimal control
title Optimal Pacing of a Cyclist in a Time Trial Based on Individualized Models of Fatigue and Recovery
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