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Core Concepts

Training Science Glossary

Friendly definitions of the key training-science terms Aithlo uses: TSS, Fitness, Fatigue, Form, Readiness, periodization and race priority.

Aithlo speaks a little training-science language. These are the core terms you'll see across your dashboard, plans and coach chat — explained in plain English.

Load and balance metrics

These four numbers work together to describe how hard you're training and how fresh you are.

TSS — Training Stress Score

A single number that captures how hard one session was, combining intensity and duration. A short easy jog scores low; a long hard ride scores high. Aithlo calculates TSS from the best data available, in priority order: power, then heart rate, then pace, then swim speed, with a fallback if none are present. Every activity gets a TSS, and those scores feed everything below.

CTL — Fitness

Short for Chronic Training Load, CTL is a 42-day rolling average of your TSS. Because it averages over six weeks, it rises slowly and represents the durable fitness you've built. Think of it as the big, slow-moving engine.

ATL — Fatigue

Short for Acute Training Load, ATL is a 7-day rolling average of your TSS. It reacts quickly to recent training, so a hard week pushes it up fast and a rest week brings it down just as quickly. This is your fatigue.

TSB — Form

Short for Training Stress Balance, TSB is simply Fitness minus Fatigue (CTL − ATL). A positive number means you're rested and fresh; a negative number means you're carrying fatigue. This is your form — how ready your body feels to perform.

Readiness

Readiness translates your form (TSB) into a plain-language status that guides and adapts your training. The bands are:

  • Fresh — TSB above 25. Very rested; great for racing, or a sign you may be undertraining.
  • Optimal — TSB between 5 and 25. The sweet spot for performing well.
  • Neutral — TSB between −10 and 5. Balanced; normal training territory.
  • Building — TSB between −25 and −10. Productively loaded; you're absorbing training.
  • Fatigued — TSB below −25. Carrying heavy fatigue; ease off and recover.

See training load and trends to watch these move over time.

Periodization phases

Periodization is the shape of a training block over time, automatically aligned to your races:

  • Base — build aerobic foundation and consistency.
  • Build — add intensity and event-specific work.
  • Peak — sharpen toward top fitness.
  • Taper — reduce load so you arrive fresh on race day.
  • Recovery — lighter blocks that let adaptations settle.

Learn more in training phases.

A / B / C race priority

Not every race matters equally. You label each race by priority so the plan knows where to aim:

  • A race — a key goal the plan peaks and tapers for.
  • B race — important but secondary; you train through it with light freshening.
  • C race — a tune-up or for fun, done on tired legs without disrupting the plan.

With the vocabulary down, explore your dashboard overview to see these numbers in action.

Last updated 29 June 2026

Training Science Glossary | Aithlo