A simple field method to identify foot strike pattern during running |
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Authors: | Marlè ne Giandolini,Thibaut Poupard,Philippe Gimenez,Nicolas Horvais,Guillaume Y. Millet,Jean-Benoî t Morin,Pierre Samozino |
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Affiliation: | 1. University of Lyon, F-42023 Saint-Etienne, France;2. Laboratory of Exercise Physiology (EA4338), F-42000 Saint-Etienne, France;3. Salomon SAS, Amer Sports Footwear Laboratory of Biomechanics and Exercise Physiology, F-74996 Annecy, France;4. University of Savoie, F-73376 Le Bourget-du-Lac, France;5. Laboratory of Exercise Physiology (EA4338), F-73376 Le Bourget-du-Lac, France;6. Human Performance Laboratory, Faculty of Kinesiology, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada |
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Abstract: | Identifying foot strike patterns in running is an important issue for sport clinicians, coaches and footwear industrials. Current methods allow the monitoring of either many steps in laboratory conditions or only a few steps in the field. Because measuring running biomechanics during actual practice is critical, our purpose is to validate a method aiming at identifying foot strike patterns during continuous field measurements. Based on heel and metatarsal accelerations, this method requires two uniaxial accelerometers. The time between heel and metatarsal acceleration peaks (THM) was compared to the foot strike angle in the sagittal plane (αfoot) obtained by 2D video analysis for various conditions of speed, slope, footwear, foot strike and state of fatigue. Acceleration and kinematic measurements were performed at 1000 Hz and 120 Hz, respectively, during 2-min treadmill running bouts. Significant correlations were observed between THM and αfoot for 14 out of 15 conditions. The overall correlation coefficient was r=0.916 (P<0.0001, n=288). The THM method is thus highly reliable for a wide range of speeds and slopes, and for all types of foot strike except for extreme forefoot strike during which the heel rarely or never strikes the ground, and for different footwears and states of fatigue. We proposed a classification based on THM: FFS<−5.49 ms
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Keywords: | Accelerometers Running pattern Incline running Field Classification |
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