Title: Anthropometry
1Chapter 3
2Anthropometry
- Deals with the measure of size, mass, shape and
inertial properties of the human body segments.
3Biomechanical Models
- Facilitates prediction of a bodys response and
the design of the workspace interface - Physical
- crash test dummies
4Biomechanical Models
- Facilitates prediction of a bodys response and
the design of the workspace interface - Physical
- crash test dummies
- Mathematical
- Joint moment of force
5Biomechanical Models
- Facilitates prediction of a bodys response and
the design of the workspace interface - Physical
- crash test dummies
- Mathematical
- Joint moment of force
6Biomechanical Models
- Facilitates prediction of a bodys response and
the design of the workspace interface - Physical
- crash test dummies
- Mathematical
- Joint moment of force
7Biomechanical Models
- Facilitates prediction of a bodys response and
the design of the workspace interface - Physical
- crash test dummies
- Mathematical
- Joint moment of force
8Measurement of Body-Segment Physical Properties
- Segments defined by bony prominence (landmarks)
(fig 3.2) - Human body system of rigid links
- known physical size and form
- connected at identifiable joints
9Caveat Body-segment links
- No joint in the human body is a simple
single-axis hinge joints, but are considered so
in many analyses (1 Degree of Freedom) - Assume
- segments are rigid links
- joints are frictionless and hinged
10Body-segment links
- Link lengths can be defined as the distance
between projected centers - Resulting error in link length estimate is lt 5
11Body-segment links
- Acceptable degree of model simplification reflect
analysis goal - Assumptions valid for most analyses
- Crash test dummies require consideration of joint
structure, ligaments, muscle response, organs,
etc. - Injury risk (Lives!!) depends on the validity of
the model
12Average Segment Lengths as Proportion of Total
Body Height (TBH)see Table 3.7
13Body-segment mass and weight
- The mass of the body segments adds additional
stresses to the body beyond those exerted by
external forces (resistance to acceleration) - These weight related stresses can be of
considerable magnitude in certain postures (a
force)
14Inertia
- Resistance of an object to changing its current
state of motion.
15Body-segment inertial properties
- When a segment can translate and/or rotate during
activity, the inertial properties of the segment
must be considered in the analysis
16Two inertial properties to consider
- Mass resistance to linear acceleration
- Moment of Inertia resistance to angular
acceleration
17Conversions
- Mass (kg) to Weight (lbs) multiply by 2.2
(downward) - Mass (kg) to Weight (N) multiply by 9.81
(downward) - Weight (lbs) to Weight (N) multiply by 4.45
18Body-segment mass and weight
- Body segment mass (weight) can be expressed as a
proportion of whole-body mass (weight) without
great loss of accuracy - TBM total body mass
- Many sources exist (see p41 in text)
19Table 3.4, p41
- Recommended Values for Percentage distribution of
total body weight - Grouped segments, of total body wt
- Head and neck 8.4
- Torso 50
- Total arm 5.1
- Total leg 15.7
20data from Winter (1989) based on Dempster
(1956) data (overhead)
- Percent distribution of total body mass
- Grouped segments of total body wt
- Head and neck 8
- HAT 68
- Total arm 5
- Total leg 16
One of the most common sources for anthropometric
data.
21Winter table
22Winter table (contd)
23Example
- TBM of individual is 82 kg (180 lbs)
- 82 kg x -9.81 804 Newtons
- What is mass of upper body?
- from Winter table HAT (head-arms-trunk) 67.8
of TBM - Calculate (82 kg) x (0.678) 55.6 kg
- 180 lbs x 0.678 122 lbs
- 804 N x 0.678 545 Newtons
24Body segmentcenter of mass location
- Insufficient to know only the mass (weight) of a
body segment to perform an analysis - Must locate the center of mass for each segment
(and the entire body) - single point mass
- point of application of the gravitational force
- See Table 3.5 p43, Table 3.13 p.48
- Better off Winter overhead
25Winter table
26Example
- Arm of individual is 51 cm (20 inches) long
- 0.51 m long
- Locate Center of mass
- from Winter table 0.53 (53 of arm length from
the proximal end) - Calculate (0.51 m) x (0.53) 0.27 m from the
proximal end of arm
27Importance
- Knowledge of
- mass center location in segment
- TBM (weight)
- link length
- sufficient input for static analysis to calculate
forces and moments at each joint for a given body
posture.
28Draw a FBD of Arm (60 inches, 215 pound person)
29Angular inertial properties
- This property is referred to as
- Inertia (linear motion)
- moment-of-inertia (angular motion)
- not only mass, but mass distribution
- Varies according to Axis
- Varies according to mass distribution
I m r2
30Moment of Inertia
- greater the moment of inertia
- greater inertial load
- Greater joint stress
Example flexed vs straight elbow
31Anthropometric Data for Biomechanics Studies in
Industry
- anthropometric data defines the reach and space
requirements of a specified population or
equipment user - modeling and simulation
- important consideration for workplace design
Making anthropometric measurements in the modern
world
32Workplace Analyses
- The book includes tables of PERCENTILE data for
segment lengths, weights, mass-center location,
and moment of inertia based on the general
population.
95
z 1.645
5
z - 1.645
50
33(No Transcript)
34Example application of Percentile Tables ( Table
3.8 3.9)
- Table 3.8 Segment lengths as TBH
- Table 3.9 the mean (50th), 5th and 95th
percentile population heights. - design must strive to accommodate the 5th to 95th
percentiles (M F) - Importance hand tools, workstation surfaces and
seat design
35Example Using USAF men and women
- New pliers with span of 11 cm (4.3)
- USAF women average ht 162.1 cm
- USAF men average ht 177.2 cm
- Calculate average hand length (0.108 x height)
- Females 162.1 x 0.108 17.5 cm (6.9 )
- Males 177.2 x 0.108 19.0 cm (7.5)
36- Male and female differences
- Racial differences
- (US vs Japanese)
- Specific population
- (ie source military, NASA, civilians)
- number of subjects
- source of variability (SD)
- (ie NASA vs civilians)
37Summary
- Knowledge of anthropometry is important
- Anthropometrics is basis of models
- mass, length, and center of mass of segments
- Design must accommodate 5th to 95th
- appropriate sex, race, specific population
- Will use the tables with future analysis