Running Barefoot Will Bolster Your Forefoot Running Performance

Doing lots of barefoot running training may boost brain function in ways that will supercharge your forefoot running performance. Run barefoot all the time, than you will be even more on top of your game. This is because barefoot running enhances sensory stimuli at the feet which forces you to be more alter reflexively and mechanically, so you become better at maintaining your running form under fatigue conditions.

How Barefoot Running Bolsters for Forefoot Running Performance

Enhanced Sensory Stimuli During Barefoot Running May Boost Forefoot Running Performance

A new study by Brick et al. investigated the mental processes and attentional strategies of elite runners under fatigued conditions. The researchers found that most elite runners focused solely on sensorimotor outputs to optimize running performance.

Surprisingly, the study found that periodic monitoring of internal states, such as breathing and exertional pain, was a distraction that resulted in negative thoughts, such as ‘running feeling hard’. Evidently so, focusing on patterning your breathing with step frequency, increases cognitive strain under fatigue conditions.

Attentional focus on breathing patterns can also lead to contradictory mental and physical states –just because you breathe heavily, doesn’t mean the body is tired.

According to the study, more effective mechanical tactics rely on sensory stimuli, which resulted in the least amount of cognitive strain. Essentially, when the going gets tough, try to relax and run by feel to make the task appear less hard.

Why is sensory stimuli the foundation of optimal running performance? Sensory stimuli is responsible for productive biomechanics, such as the timing of reflexive responses, dynamic stability, and forefoot striking, all of which are hacked by cushioned running shoes.

The researchers concluded that the crucial component to winning are informational aspects of sensory stimuli and that optimal running economy is most likely stimulus driven, suggesting that barefoot running can have a supportive effect on performance.

Enhanced Sensory Stimuli During Barefoot Running May Boost Forefoot Running Performance

Better Biomechanics Barefoot

Barefoot running heightens proprioceptive arousal, provoking greater reactive neuromuscular control as compared with cushioned running shoes –shoes that mask sensory stimuli, thereby delaying biofeedback.

If heightened sensory stimuli boosts performance, running barefoot may afford a runner the advantage of efficiency over a shod runner. By comparison, a shod runner is overcome with an urge to engage in unproductive mechanics, such as heel striking and inappropriate knee and hip flexion, that deleteriously interfere with performance.

So instead of stressing out about whether to focus on breathing, weather, or time, to cope under pressure, all you need is a burst of sensory stimuli via barefoot running as a safe refuge in sustaining efficient forefoot running form.

Not a fan of barefoot running? Click here to read about ultra minimalist footwear that mimic the barefoot experience.

More From Run Forefoot:

Treadmills and Forefoot Running

Running Backward Sharpens Forefoot Strike Form

Enjoy Long-Term Foot Strength By Walking Barefoot on Uneven Surfaces

Why Forefoot Running Will End Up Changing Your Life

References:

Brick N., MacIntyre T and Campbell M. Metacognitive processes in the self-regulation of performance in elite endurance runners. Psych Sport Exerc, 2015;19:1-9.

Bretta Riches

"I believe the forefoot strike is the engine of endurance running..."

BSc Neurobiology; MSc Biomechanics candidate, ultra minimalist runner & founder of RunForefoot. I was a heel striker, always injured. I was inspired by the great Tirunesh Dibaba to try forefoot running. Now, I'm injury free. This is why I launched Run Forefoot, to advocate the health & performance benefits of forefoot running and to raise awareness on the dangers of heel striking, because the world needs to know.
Bretta Riches

P.S. Don't forget to check out the Run Forefoot Facebook Page, it's a terrific place to ask questions about forefoot running, barefoot running and injury. I'm always happy to help!

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