Predicting athlete ground reaction forces and moments from motion capture

Biomedical engineering not elsewhere classified Video Recording Computer simulation Action recognition Biomechanical Phenomena Motion 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Athletes Wearable sensors Humans Electronics Least-Squares Analysis sensors and digital hardware Biomedical engineering Algorithms
DOI: 10.1007/s11517-018-1802-7 Publication Date: 2018-03-16T23:52:09Z
ABSTRACT
An understanding of athlete ground reaction forces and moments (GRF/Ms) facilitates the biomechanist's downstream calculation of net joint forces and moments, and associated injury risk. Historically, force platforms used to collect kinetic data are housed within laboratory settings and are not suitable for field-based installation. Given that Newton's Second Law clearly describes the relationship between a body's mass, acceleration, and resultant force, is it possible that marker-based motion capture can represent these parameters sufficiently enough to estimate GRF/Ms, and thereby minimize our reliance on surface embedded force platforms? Specifically, can we successfully use partial least squares (PLS) regression to learn the relationship between motion capture and GRF/Ms data? In total, we analyzed 11 PLS methods and achieved average correlation coefficients of 0.9804 for GRFs and 0.9143 for GRMs. Our results demonstrate the feasibility of predicting accurate GRF/Ms from raw motion capture trajectories in real-time, overcoming what has been a significant barrier to non-invasive collection of such data. In applied biomechanics research, this outcome has the potential to revolutionize athlete performance enhancement and injury prevention. Graphical Abstract Using data science to model high-fidelity motion and force plate data frees biomechanists from the laboratory.
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