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STEM-Talk

Episode 156: Josh Hagen discusses optimizing performance in athletes and warfighters

STEM-Talk

Dawn Kernagis and Ken Ford

Health & Fitness, Nutrition, Science, Natural Sciences, Alternative Health

4.6 • 694 Ratings

🗓️ 21 August 2023

⏱️ 75 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Today’s interview is with Dr. Josh Hagen, the director of the Human Performance Collaborative at Ohio State University and an Associate Research Professor in the university’s Department of Integrated Systems Engineering. Joining co-host Ken Ford for this episode is IHMC’s Chief Strategic Partnership Officer Morley Stone who has a long history with Josh has and been instrumental in his career. Today we talk with Josh about his work at the Human Performance Collaborate, which brings together multi-disciplinary teams of researchers, sports scientists, data scientists, and practitioners with the goal of optimizing human performance in Ohio State athletes. Within the human performance research area, Josh leads two areas: Sport and Tactical Performance Science and Recovery Science. At Ohio State, Josh works with other performance-science researchers to evaluate the physical traits and capabilities of athletes. Josh and his colleagues then collaborate with coaches and athletic trainers to make adjustments in the weight room, on the field, and during recovery after training or competitions. In addition to his work at Ohio State, Josh also is working on federally funded projects in human performance with Special Operations Command, The Air Force Research Laboratory, the Office of Naval Research and several private foundations. Josh joined IHMC in 2022 in a collaborate role as a Visiting Senior Research Scientist. Josh is a graduate of the University of Cincinnati where he studied and earned a Ph.D. in materials science and engineering. He spent 11 years at the Air Force Research Laboratory, which is where Morley and Josh first worked together. After his stint at the Air Force Research Laboratory, Josh headed for West Virginia University as the director of the Human Performance Innovation Center at the Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute before moving to the Ohio State University. Show notes: [00:03:39] Morley starts the interview asking Josh if he played a lot of sports as a kid. [00:03:54] Morley asks if it is true that in addition to being a bit of a jock, Josh was also a nerd growing up. [00:04:34] Josh talks about the high school chemistry teacher who got him excited about science. [00:06:05] Morley asks how Josh ended up at the University of Cincinnati. [00:07:06] Morley mentions that after Josh earned his bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering, he worked for a private company before deciding he did not want to spend his career in chemical engineering. Morley asks about the advice that one of his professors gave Josh at the time. [00:09:03] Ken mentions that it was at the Materials Directorate at the Air Force Research Lab, where Josh first met Morley. Ken asks Morley what he remembers about the young Josh. [00:11:19] Ken turns the question to Josh and asks him about his first impressions of Morley. [00:12:12] Ken mentions that after Josh completed his graduate work, he again went to work in the private sector, and again found it unfulfilling. Josh talks about calling Morley to see if he had a job opening. [00:13:51] Morley mentions that in 2018, Josh left the Air Force and went to work at West Virginia University, where he became the director of the Human Performance Innovation Center at the Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute. Morley asks Josh how that job came about and what sort of work went on in that lab. [00:15:46] Ken mentions that after Josh’s time at West Virginia, Morley offered Josh a job at Ohio State University, where Morley was, at the time, the senior vice president for research at Ohio State. Ken asks what this time was like for Josh. [00:17:17] Morley mentions that in Josh’s role as the director of the Human Performance Collaborative, he works with a multidisciplinary team, and largely worked with two populations, sports athletes and the military. Morley asks Josh to give a sense of how Josh’s lab works with both groups.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to STEM Talk.

0:01.1

Stem Talk.

0:02.0

Stem Talk.

0:03.0

Stem Talk.

0:04.0

Stem Talk, where we introduce you to fascinating people who passionately inhabit the scientific and technical frontiers of our society.

0:15.0

Hello, I'm your host, Dr. Morley Stone, stepping in for STEM Talk's regular co-host, Dr. Don

0:21.4

Kurnagas. Joining me to introduce today's podcast as the man behind the curtain, Dr. Ken Ford,

0:27.0

IHMC's director and chairman of the double secret selection committee that selects all the guests

0:31.8

who appear on STEM Talk. Hi, Marley. It's great to be here. Our guest today is our friend Dr. Josh Hagan,

0:38.9

Director of the Human Performance Collaborative and an Associate Research Professor in the Department

0:43.9

of Integrated Systems Engineering at Ohio State University.

0:47.4

Launched in 2019, the Human Performance Collaborative brings together a multidisciplinary team

0:53.2

of researchers, sports

0:54.7

scientists, data scientists, and practitioners with the unified goal of optimizing human performance

1:00.1

in athletes, military troops, and patient populations. Within the human performance research area,

1:06.0

Josh leads two areas, sport and tactical performance science and recovery science. At Ohio State,

1:12.0

Josh works with other performance science researchers to evaluate the physical traits and

1:16.4

capabilities of athletes. Josh and his colleagues then work with coaches and athletic trainers

1:21.0

to make adjustments that the athletes should enact in the weight room, on the field, or doing recovery

1:26.0

after training or competitions.

1:28.3

Josh is a graduate of the University of Cincinnati, where he studied bio-inspired photoelectric

1:32.9

devices and earned a PhD in material science and engineering. He spent 11 years at the Air Force

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