A wireless accelerometer node for reliable and valid measurement of lumbar accelerations during treadmill running

This study investigated the reliability of a wireless accelerometer and its agreement with optical motion capture for the measurement of root mean square (RMS) acceleration during running. RMS acceleration provides a whole-body metric of movement mechanics and economy. Fifteen healthy college-age participants performed treadmill running for two 60-s trials at 2.22, 2.78, and 3.33 m/s and one trial of 150 s (five 30-s epochs) at 2.78 m/s. We assessed between-trial and within-trial reliability, and agreement in each axis between a trunk-mounted wireless accelerometer and a reflective marker on the accelerometer measured by optical motion capture. Intraclass correlations assessing between-trial repeatability were 0.89-0.97, depending on the axis, and intraclass correlations assessing within-trial repeatability were 0.99-1.00. Bland-Altman analyses assessing agreement indicated mean difference values between -0.03 and 0.03 g, depending on the axis. Anterio-posterior acceleration had the greatest limits of agreement (LOA) (±0.12 g) and vertical acceleration had the smallest LOA (±0.03 g). For measuring RMS acceleration of the trunk, this wireless accelerometer node provides repeatable and valid measurement compared with the standard laboratory method of optical motion capture.
© Copyright 2016 Sports Biomechanics. Routledge. Published by Routledge. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:technical and natural sciences biological and medical sciences sports facilities and sports equipment
Tagging:wireless
Published in:Sports Biomechanics
Language:English
Published: Routledge 2016
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1080/14763141.2015.1123760
Volume:15
Issue:1
Pages:11-22
Document types:article
Level:advanced