Bone length calibration can significantly improve the measurement accuracy of knee flexion angle when using a marker-less system to capture the motion of countermovement jump

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Susan Giblin; Dara Meldrum; Mark McGroarty; Stuart O'Brien; Simon Rand; Stephen Smith; Karl Grogan; Friedrich Wetterling, Bone length calibration can significantly improve the measurement accuracy of knee flexion angle when using a marker-less system to capture the motion of countermovement jump, 2016 IEEE-EMBS International Conference on Biomedical and Health Informatics (BHI), Las Vegas, NV, USA, 2016, pp. 392-397Download Item:

Abstract:
Marker-less motion capture systems can provide online recordings of human biomechanics during rapid dynamic exercises such as countermovement jump (CMJ) which could indicate an athlete's risk of injury to the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL). However, without additional postprocessing the localisation accuracy of the joints can be insufficient. Subsequently, biomechanics measurements, e.g. knee flexion angles, can be severely corrupted. We propose a calibration algorithm to correct for deviations in the bone length during CMJ as recorded by a low cost marker-less motion capture system (i.e. Kinect, version 2). Results were compared to gold standard VICON measurements. In this single subject study of three CMJs the accuracy of the measured knee flexion angle during stabilisation (post jump) was significantly improved from -9.6° to -3.8° (p<;0.05) for the left knee, and from -5.0° to 1.7° (p<;0.05) for the right knee. In conclusion, bone-length calibration and correction may enhance the joint localisation accuracy for low cost marker-less motion capture to the extend where clinically-relevant decisions can be facilitated.
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Author: Meldrum, Dara; Wetterling, Friedrich
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3rd IEEE EMBS International Conference on Biomedical and Health Informatics, BHI 2016;Availability:
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