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In The Story of the Human Body on p. 85, it claims that running an equal distance at two different speeds uses equal calories:

In fact, a running human's legs store and release energy so efficiently that running is only about 30 to 50 percent more costly than walking in the endurance-speed range. What's more, these springs are so effective that they make the cost of human endurance running (but not sprinting) independent of speed: it costs the same number of calories to run five miles at a pace of either 7 or 10 minutes per mile, a phenomenon many people find counterintuitive. [emphasis mine]

It provides a reference, Energy-saving mechanisms in walking and running, Journal of Experimental Biology 1991 160: 55-69 which I looked up for more information, but it didn't have any discussion about actual human speeds.

A recent source, Economy of Running: beyond the measurement of oxygen uptake. J Appl Physiol 107:1918-1922, said the caloric unit costs of higher speeds while running definitely increase:

Caloric unit cost was 1.05 +/- 0.09, 1.07 +/- 0.08, and 1.11 +/- 0.07 kcal*kg(-1)*km(-1) at the three trial speeds, respectively. There was no difference in oxygen cost with respect to speed (P = 0.657); however, caloric unit cost significantly increased with speed (P < 0.001). It was concluded that expression of running economy in terms of caloric unit cost is more sensitive to changes in speed and is a more valuable expression of running economy than oxygen uptake, even when normalized per distance traveled.

I think this paper, Optimal running speed and the evolution of hominin hunting strategies. Journal of Human Evolution. 56, 355–360, might give some clues, but I can't access it.

If different running speeds differ in caloric unit costs, they could still be per-distance caloric equivalents, due to shorter time spent running at higher speeds.

However, anecdotally, sprinting seems like it would incur a non-linear increase in caloric expenditure per distance because of how incredibly tired I get sprinting 10 x 100m as opposed to running 1000m.

Can someone provide a more definitive, source-based answer to this question?

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  • This may be a better fit on skeptics.SE. Commented Nov 30, 2015 at 22:08
  • 2
    @DaveLiepmann disagree, and I think this is a great question of something I've wondered myself many times.
    – erictrigo
    Commented Dec 1, 2015 at 8:52

1 Answer 1

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This is non-trivial as the body has 3 different, but connected, metabolic subsystems, see Nutrition for Health, Fitness, & Sport, or How does one train for sports when the three metabolic pathways interact?. So a sprinter will likely only anaerobically consume the ADP present in their muscles, and possibly utilise some energy held in their blood sugar. Both these subsystems / conversions have a lesser overhead than that of aerobically converting energy to / from fat, ATP and ADP.

Anyway ignoring sprinting, burning calories is essentially an aerobic process, so generally can be approximated / modeled from the oxygen consumed and pumped to your muscles by your heart (volume of O2 [VO2] and Heart Rate [HR]).

A number of external variables affect the calories required to travel a given distance: body mass, speed, wind resistance, gradient, temperature, heart size.... but essentially it's the heart rate and oxygen volume that determine, and can be used to estimate, the amount of energy consumed in a given period.

There are several studies / regression equations that attempt to model the dependencies between the variables listed above, such as the ACMS equations, but in your case the MET tables are probably of more interest. As they list for various activities / speeds the relative energy cost, of an individual performing them.

Possibly also worth a read of: How reliable is this study for the relationship between heart rate and calories burned?


The following maths I've lifted from my earlier answer to: Metabolic Equations for Anaerobic Exercise? (below).


MET = vVO2Max = VO2Max / 3.5 = kCalBurnt / (bodyMassKg * timePer formingHours)

estimated VO2 = (currentHeartRate / MaxHeartRate) * VO2Max

where: MaxHeartRate = 210 - (0.8 * ageYears)

Kcal/Min ~= 5 * massKg * VO2 / 1000

Note: The 5 calories / min constant, assumes just carbohydrates are being converted, over a short period. If the exercise is sustained aerobically for a period this value drops to 4.86 to reflect a mix of fats and carbohydrates are being converted into energy.

A number of sites have MET estimates for specific activities eg.

So just use the formula above to estimate the calories spent performing a particular exercise eg. If you spend 6 mins on an Elliptical trainer (moderate effort), which has been assigned a MET score of 5.0, and you weigh 80Kg, you'dend up with:

KCalBurnt = MET * bodyMassKg * timePerformingHours
          = 5.0 * 80 * 0.1 
          = 40 KCal

The ACMS equations may also be of interest:

Arm Ergometry VO2 = (3 * workRateWatts) / bodyMassKg + 3.5

Leg Ergometry: VO2 = (1.8 * workRateWatts) / bodyMassKg + 7

Stepping: VO2 = (0.2 * (steps in a Min)) + 1.33 * (1.8 * stepHeightMeters * (stepsInAMin)) + 3.5

Walking: VO2 = (0.1 * metersWalkedInAMin) + (1.8 * metersWalkedInAMin) * (fractionalGrade) + 3.5

Running: VO2 = (0.2 * metersRunInAMin) + (0.9 * metersRunInAMin) * (fractionalGrade) + 3.5

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