eccentric on the way down concentric on the way up
A squat involves both eccentric and concentric muscle contractions. The lowering phase where you bend your knees and lower your body is the eccentric phase, while the rising phase where you extend your knees and stand up is the concentric phase.
The bench press has two phases: eccentric and concentric. The first phase, as you lower weight toward your chest, is called the eccentric, or muscle-lengthening motion. The second phase, as you raise the weight back up, is called the concentric, or muscle-shortening phase. It is during the concentric phase that you can feel your chest getting tight. Learning which muscles are used during the concentric phase of the bench press is beneficial for focusing your mind on the correct area and therefore improving your exercise technique.The primary concentric mover of the bench press is the pectoralis major, which you may better know as the chest. Depending on which version of the bench press you are doing, you will be recruiting a specific part of the muscle group. The regular bench press on a flat surface mainly works your middle pecs. The incline and decline versions mainly work your upper and lower pecs, respectively.
Isometric contraction: Holding a static yoga pose. Concentric contraction: Lifting a weight in a bicep curl. Eccentric contraction: Lowering a weight in a deadlift. Isotonic contraction: Running or cycling at a steady pace.
Eccentric and Concentric contractions are both types of Isotonic Contraction. In isotontic contractions the length of a muscle changes, ie movement occurs, unlike an Isometric Contraction where force is applied but no movement occurs. Concentric contraction is the more obvious type of sixe change a muscle can have, it is when the muscle Shortens to move the Load. For example id one was to bend the elbow whilslt holding a weight (called a Bicep Curl) the Brachialis and, to a lesser extent, the Biceps Brach would shorten and pull the forearm up with the weight. Eccentric contracion is the type that muslce builder who wish to bulk up with inefficient muscle use. This is where the muscle Lengthens under conrtaction. To continue the same example above, imagine the weight was too heavy to hold up so it starts to fall under control. The brachialis and biceps muscles are still contracting trying to hold the weight in place but they are not producing enough force so the load is stretching them out.
Every step, whether going uphill, downhill, or on flat land, involves both an eccentric and concentric contraction.The eccentric contraction occurs when the quadriceps muscles lengthen as they load. In order for your quadriceps to lengthen, the knee must bend. Thus, the eccentric contraction in the walking motion occurs just after you step. This is perhaps more obvious with running than walking. After the foot touches the ground, the quadriceps is loaded eccentrically by the weight of the body as the knee bends.The concentric contraction of the quadriceps occurs then when the muscle shortens, as you push off from your foot. Again, this is probably more obvious with a running motion than walking motion. After the weight of your body has shifted onto the foot that is currently in contact with the ground (with your knee bent), your quadriceps contracts concentrically as the knee unbends and you lift your own body weight.So walking, even downhill, still involves both eccentric and concentric contractions. Walking (and running) downhill can lead to fatigue in your quadriceps due to the greater eccentric loading that occurs when going downhill. The range of muscle motion can be greater and your body is coming from "higher" up (its previous elevation on the hill), which can increase the load as well. As compared with concentric contractions, eccentric contractions can cause more damage to the muscle.
The noun form of "eccentric" (person) would be an eccentric, as in "The old eccentric left her possessions to her cat."The noun form of the adjective eccentric otherwise is eccentricity.
It depends on your position and if you are moving with or against gravity. If you are standing up right in anatomical position, and elbow extension is occurring after elbow flexion, then it is eccentric. When the elbow is moving into extension from flexion, it is moving downwards with the force of gravity. In order for this motion to occur, the biceps brachii has to lengthen, and the triceps brachii has to relax. The biceps brachii therefore is your primary mover. If elbow extension were occurring against the force of gravity (imagine your shoulder is flexed to 180 and your elbow is flexed, and you want to move it into extension while your shoulder is still flexed at 180), then it would be a concentric contraction and your primary mover would be your triceps brachii as it would be shortening to complete the motion. The biceps brachii would be your antagonist and it would be relaxing to allow the triceps to do its work. concentric= muscle shortening eccentric= muscle lengthening I hope this helps. I'm an OT student and this has been drilled into me.
Yes.
He is up himself
look it up never use answers
A sit up is an eccentric muscle contraction.