Title: How Biomechanics Can measure Performance
1How Biomechanics Can measure Performance
- D. Gordon E. Robertson, PhD
- Fellow, Canadian Society for Biomechanics
- Emeritus Professor, School of Human Kinetics,
- University of Ottawa,
- Ottawa, Canada
2What is Biomechanics?
- Study of forces and their effects on living
bodies - Types of forces
- External forces
- ground reaction forces
- forces applied to other objects or persons
- fluid forces (swimming, air resistance)
- impact forces
- Internal forces
- muscle forces (strength and power)
- forces in bones, ligaments, cartilage
3Types of analyses
- Temporal (times, timing)
- Kinematic (positions, motion)
- Kinetic (forces, moments of force)
- Direct
- Indirect
- Electromyographic (muscle activation)
4Temporal Analyses
- Quantifies durations of performances in whole
(race times) or in part (split times, stride
times, stroke rates, etc.) - Instruments include
- stop watches, electronic timers
- timing gates
- frame-by-frame video analysis
- Easy to do but not very illuminating
- Necessary to enable kinematic studies
5Example Electronic timing
Donovan Bailey sets world record (9.835) despite
slowest reaction time (0.174) of finalists
6Kinematics
- Position, velocity (speed) acceleration
- Angular position, velocity acceleration
- Distance travelled
- tape measures, electronic sensors, trundle
- wheel
- Linear displacement
- point-to-point linear distance and direction
- Angular displacement
- changes in joint angular orientations from
- point-to-point, 3D angles are order specific
7Kinematics
- Instrumentation includes
- tape measures, electrogoniometers
- speed guns, accelerometers
- motion capture from video or other imaging
devices (cinefilm, TV, infrared, ultrasonic,
etc.) - GPS, gyroscopes, wireless sensors
8Kinematics
- Cheap to very expensive
- Cheap yields low information
- e.g., stride length, range of motion, distance
jumped or speed of object thrown or batted - Expensive yields over-abundance of data
- e.g., marker trajectories and their kinematics,
segment, joint, and total body linear and angular
kinematics, in 1, 2, or 3 dimensions - essential for later inverse dynamics and other
kinetic analyses
9Gait Characteristics - Walking
10Cheap Gait Characteristics of Running or
Sprinting
Stride velocity stride length / stride time
Stride rate 1 / stride time
11Cheap video analysis of sprinting
- Hip locations of last 60 metres of 100-m race
- Male 10.03 s
- accelerated to
- 60 m before
- maximum speed
- of 12 m/s
- Female 11.06 s
- accelerated to
- 70 m before
- maximum speed
- of 10 m/s
- Neither
- decelerated!
12Moderate accelerometry
- Direct measures such as electrogoniometry (for
joint angles) or accelerometry are relatively
inexpensive but can yield real-time information
of selected parts of the body - Accelerometry is particularly useful for
evaluating impacts to the body
headform with 9 linear accelerometers to quantify
3D acceleration
13Expensive Gait and Movement Analysis Laboratory
- Multiple infrared cameras or infrared markers
- Motion capture system
- Usually multiple force platforms
14Kinetics
- Forces or moments of force (torques)
- Impulse and momentum (linear and angular)
- Mechanical energy (potential and kinetic)
- Work (of forces and moments)
- Power (of forces and moments)
15Kinetics
- Two ways of obtaining kinetics
- Direct dynamometry
- Use of instruments to directly
- measure external and even internal
- forces
- Indirect dynamometry via inverse dynamics
- Indirectly estimate internal forces
- and moments of force from directly
- measured kinematics, body segment
- parameters and externally measured
- forces
16Kinetics dynamometry
- Measurement of force, moment of force, or power
- Instrumentation includes
- Force transducers
- strain gauge, LVDTs, piezoelectric,
piezoresistive - Pressure mapping sensors
- Force platforms
- strain gauge, piezoelectric, Hall effect
- Isokinetic
- for single joint moments and powers,
- concentric, eccentric, isotonic
17force transducers
- Strain gauge
- inexpensive, range of sizes, and applications
- dynamic range is limited, has static capability,
easy to calibrate - can be incorporated into sports equipment
- Examples bicycle pedals, oars and paddles,
rackets, hockey sticks, and bats
18Example rowing ergometry
- Subject used a Gjessing rowing ergometer with a
strain gauge force transducer on cable that
rotates a flywheel having a 3 kilopond resistance - Force tracing visible
- in real-time to coach
- and athlete
- Increased impulse
- means better
- performance
- Applies to cycling, canoeing, swim or track
starts
19force transducers
- Pressure mapping sensors
- moderately expensive, range of sizes and
applications, poor dynamic response - can be incorporated between person and sport
environment (ground, implement) - Examples shoe insoles, seating, gloves
20Example impact testing
- Helmet and 5-kg headform dropped from fixed
height onto an anvil. Piezoresistive force
transducer in anvil measures linear impact
(impulse) and especially - peak force
- Peak force is reduced
- when impulse is spread
- over time or over larger
- area by helmet and
- liner materials
21force platforms
- Typically measure three components of the ground
reaction force, location of the force application
(called centre of pressure), and the free
(vertical) moment of force
22Example fencing (fleche)
- Instantaneous ground reaction force vectors are
located at the centres of pressure - Force signatures show pattern of ground reaction
forces on each force platform
23Kinetics inverse dynamics
- process by which all forces and moments of force
across a joint are reduced to a single net force
and net moment of force
- process by which all forces and moments of force
across a joint are reduced to a single net force
and net moment of force - the net force is primarily caused by remote
actions such as ground reaction forces or impact
forces - the net moment of force, also called net torque,
is primarily caused by the muscles crossing the
joint, thus it is highly related to the
coordination of the motion, injury mechanisms,
and performance
24inverse dynamics
- requires linear and angular kinematics of the
segments and knowledge of each segments inertial
properties
- inertial properties are from proportions that
estimate the segment mass, then equations that
distribute the mass equally to geometrical solids
based on markers placed on the segment
25inverse dynamics
- At each joint the moment of force may be flexor
or extensor depending on the instantaneous
actions of all the structures acting across the
joint - Muscles are the major contributors to the moment
26inverse dynamics
- At each joint the moment of force may be flexor
or extensor depending on the instantaneous
actions of all the structures acting across the
joint - At the end of the range of motion muscles are of
less importance
27inverse dynamics
- In addition, each moment can work concentrically
(cause increased motion), eccentrically (cause
motion to be reduced or stopped) or isometrically
(hold statically)
28inverse dynamics
- A concentric contraction of a muscle means the
muscle shortens producing motion or elevation and
does positive work - A concentric moment of force means that the
moment does positive work
29inverse dynamics
- An eccentric contraction of a muscle means the
muscle lengthens slowing or stopping motion and
does negative work - An eccentric moment of force means that the
moment does negative work
30example walking
- study of walking on level ground and up 3-degree,
6-degree, and 9-degree ramps - averages of 12 subjects (6 females/6 males)
- force platform was in floor and midway up ramp
- only left side analyzed
- planar (2D) analysis
31normalized Moments (left) and powers (right) of
level and incline walking
hip
hip
knee
knee
ankle
ankle
Time (seconds, Toe-off to Toe-off)
32normalized Moments (left) and powers (right) of
level and incline walking
hip
hip
knee
knee
Plantiflexor moment during stance first
does negative work then positive work at push-off
ankle
ankle
Time (seconds, Toe-off to Toe-off)
33normalized Moments (left) and powers (right) of
level and incline walking
hip
hip
Knee flexor moment at end of swing does negative
work to decelerate foot prior to heel-strike (so
you wont scuff the floor)
knee
knee
ankle
ankle
Time (seconds, Toe-off to Toe-off)
34normalized Moments (left) and powers (right) of
level and incline walking
hip
hip
Knee extensor moment during early stance does
negative work to allow controlled bending and
soft weight acceptance then does positive work to
extend knee slightly, but more so for the
9-degree incline
knee
knee
ankle
ankle
Time (seconds, Toe-off to Toe-off)
35normalized Moments (left) and powers (right) of
level and incline walking
hip
hip
Knee extensor moment during late stance does
negative work to control amount of knee flexion
but less so for the three inclines
knee
knee
ankle
ankle
Time (seconds, Toe-off to Toe-off)
36normalized Moments (left) and powers (right) of
level and incline walking
hip
hip
Hip extensor moment does positive work prior to
and during landing to extend hip, but more so as
incline increases
knee
knee
ankle
ankle
Time (seconds, Toe-off to Toe-off)
37normalized Moments (left) and powers (right) of
level and incline walking
hip
hip
Hip flexor moment does negative work
during mid-stance to control amount of extension
knee
knee
ankle
ankle
Time (seconds, Toe-off to Toe-off)
38normalized Moments (left) and powers (right) of
level and incline walking
hip
hip
Hip flexor then does positive work to flex hip
prior to and during swing phase
knee
knee
ankle
ankle
Time (seconds, Toe-off to Toe-off)
39normalized Moments (left) and powers (right) of
level and incline walking
hip
hip
- Comparisons among inclines
- no significant differences in peak moments at
ankle, knee, or hip - no significant differences in peak powers
excepting at the knee during early stance
- Comparisons among inclines
- no significant differences in peak moments at
ankle, knee, or hip - no significant differences in peak powers
excepting at the knee during early stance
- Comparisons among inclines
- significant increase in hip extensor work and
decrease in hip flexor negative work as incline
increase - knee extensor work for 9-degree incline
- significant increase in plantiflexor work
knee
knee
ankle
ankle
Time (seconds, Toe-off to Toe-off)
40example sprinting
- male sprinter at 50 m into 100-m race
- race time 10.03 s
- stride length 4.68 metres
- stride time 0.40 s
- stanceswing 25
41example sprinting
- male sprinter at 50 m into 100-m race
- race time 10.03 s
- stride length 4.68 metres
- stride time 0.40 s
- stanceswing 25
- horizontal velocity of foot in mid-swing was 23.5
m/s (85 km/h)! - only swing phase could be analyzed since no force
platform in track
42sprinting knee
- knee extensor moment did negative work (red)
during first half of swing (likely not muscles) - knee flexors did negative work (blue) during
second half to prevent full extension (likely due
to hamstrings) - little or no work (green) done by knee moments
43sprinting hip
- hip flexor moment did positive work (red) during
first part of swing (rectus femoris, iliopsoas) - hip extensor moment did negative work mid-swing
(green) then positive work (blue) for extension
(likely gluteals)
44sPrinting conclusion
- knee flexors (hamstrings, gastrocnemius) are NOT
responsible for knee flexion during mid-swing of
sprinting - hip flexors (rectus femoris, iliopsoas) are
responsible for both hip flexion AND knee flexion
during swing - hip flexors are most important for improving
stride length - hip extensors (gluteals) are necessary for leg
extension while knee flexors (hamstrings) prevent
knee locking before landing
45normalized Moments (left) and powers (right) of
walking
- gait speed peak hip power
-
- run 6.1 m/s 9.0? W/kg
- sprint 11.9 m/s 53.0?W/kg
- thus, 8 fold increase in speed requires 175 fold
increase in hip flexor power!
46Peak Hip flexor power during swing versus speed
- exponential increase in the peak power required
to cause thigh flexion during swing phase - likely muscles are rectus femoris and ilio-psoas
47electromyography
- process of measuring the electrical discharges
due to muscle recruitment - only quantifies the active component of muscle,
passive component is not recorded - levels are relative to a particular muscle and a
particular person therefore need a method to
compare muscle/muscle or person/person - not all subjects can perform maximal voluntary
contractions (MVCs) to permit normalization - effective way to identify patterns of muscle
recruitment
48emg amplifiers
- Types
- cable
- cable telemetry
- telemetry
49emg electrodes
- Types
- surface (safest, painless, best for sports)
- fine wire (better for detecting which part of
muscle is active) - needle (best for medical)
50Example lacrosse
- experience male lacrosse player
- release velocity 20 m/s (72 km/h)
- duration from backswing to release 0.45 s
- hybrid style throw
- 8 surface EMGs of (L/R erector spinae, L/R
external obliques, L/R rectus abdominus, and L/R
internal obliques) - four force platforms
- maximum speed throws into a canvas curtain
51Example lacrosse
left erector spinae right erector spinae left
external obliques right external obliques left
rectus abdominus right rectus abdominus left
internal obliques right internal obliques
start of throw
release
52electromyography
- Benefits
- identifies whether a particular muscle is active
or inactive - can help to identify pre-fatigue and
- fatigue states
- Drawbacks
- encumbers the subject
- difficult to interpret
- cannot identify contribution muscle is
- making (concentric, eccentric, isometric)
- should be recorded with kinematics
53future
- musculoskeletal models
- measure internal muscle, ligament and
bone-on-bone forces - difficult to construct, validate, and apply
- forward dynamics
- predicts kinematics based on the recruitment
pattern of muscle forces - difficult to construct, validate, and apply
- computer simulations
- requires appropriate model (see above) and
accurate input data to drive the model - can help to test new techniques without injury
risk
54conclusions
- kinematics are useful for distinguishing one
technique from another, one trial from another,
one athlete from another - kinematics yields unreliable information about
how to produce a motion - direct kinetics are useful as feedback to quickly
monitor and improve performance - direct kinetics does not quantify which muscles
or coordination pattern produced the motion
55conclusions continued
- inverse dynamics and joint power analyses
identify which muscle groups and coordination
pattern produces a motion - cannot directly identify specific muscles,
biarticular contractions, or elasticity - electromyograms yield level of specific muscle
recruitment and potentially fatigue state - electromyograms are relative measures of activity
and cannot quantify passive muscle force, should
be used with other measures
56Questions, comments, answers
School of Human Kinetics, University of
Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario
Beaver in winter, Gatineau Park, Gatineau, Quebec