To see if that bounce-back helped runners save energy when the shoes were on their feet, the scientists had 18 runners test the shoes on a treadmill. Researchers measured the oxygen the runners breathed in and the carbon dioxide they breathed out to calculate how much energy their bodies used as they ran.
The result: “We saw a huge energy savings of 4 percent with Nike’s shoe,” says Wouter Hoogkamer, a sports biomechanist at the Locomotion Lab. He studies the physics of how bodies move. Does the shoe really shave time off races? We may never know for sure, but top runners are taking the design to the proving ground that matters most: the pavement.