Identification of Cross-Country Skiing Movement Patterns Using Micro-Sensors

This study investigated the potential of micro-sensors for use in the identification of the main movement patterns used in cross-country skiing. Data were collected from four elite international and four Australian athletes in Europe and in Australia using a MinimaxX<sup>TM</sup...

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Main Authors: Dale Chapman, Colin Macintosh, Gordon Waddington, Judith Anson, Keith Lyons, Finn Marsland
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2012-04-01
Series:Sensors
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/12/4/5047
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spelling doaj-0e7092a368d04a2a84e69e2a0cd945122020-11-25T01:11:00ZengMDPI AGSensors1424-82202012-04-011245047506610.3390/s120405047Identification of Cross-Country Skiing Movement Patterns Using Micro-SensorsDale ChapmanColin MacintoshGordon WaddingtonJudith AnsonKeith LyonsFinn MarslandThis study investigated the potential of micro-sensors for use in the identification of the main movement patterns used in cross-country skiing. Data were collected from four elite international and four Australian athletes in Europe and in Australia using a MinimaxX<sup>TM</sup> unit containing accelerometer, gyroscope and GPS sensors. Athletes performed four skating techniques and three classical techniques on snow at moderate velocity. Data from a single micro-sensor unit positioned in the centre of the upper back was sufficient to visually identify cyclical movement patterns for each technique. The general patterns for each technique were identified clearly across all athletes while at the same time distinctive characteristics for individual athletes were observed. Differences in speed, snow condition and gradient of terrain were not controlled in this study and these factors could have an effect on the data patterns. Development of algorithms to process the micro-sensor data into kinematic measurements would provide coaches and scientists with a valuable performance analysis tool. Further research is needed to develop such algorithms and to determine whether the patterns are consistent across a range of different speeds, snow conditions and terrain, and for skiers of differing ability.http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/12/4/5047accelerometergyroscopekinematicstechnique analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dale Chapman
Colin Macintosh
Gordon Waddington
Judith Anson
Keith Lyons
Finn Marsland
spellingShingle Dale Chapman
Colin Macintosh
Gordon Waddington
Judith Anson
Keith Lyons
Finn Marsland
Identification of Cross-Country Skiing Movement Patterns Using Micro-Sensors
Sensors
accelerometer
gyroscope
kinematics
technique analysis
author_facet Dale Chapman
Colin Macintosh
Gordon Waddington
Judith Anson
Keith Lyons
Finn Marsland
author_sort Dale Chapman
title Identification of Cross-Country Skiing Movement Patterns Using Micro-Sensors
title_short Identification of Cross-Country Skiing Movement Patterns Using Micro-Sensors
title_full Identification of Cross-Country Skiing Movement Patterns Using Micro-Sensors
title_fullStr Identification of Cross-Country Skiing Movement Patterns Using Micro-Sensors
title_full_unstemmed Identification of Cross-Country Skiing Movement Patterns Using Micro-Sensors
title_sort identification of cross-country skiing movement patterns using micro-sensors
publisher MDPI AG
series Sensors
issn 1424-8220
publishDate 2012-04-01
description This study investigated the potential of micro-sensors for use in the identification of the main movement patterns used in cross-country skiing. Data were collected from four elite international and four Australian athletes in Europe and in Australia using a MinimaxX<sup>TM</sup> unit containing accelerometer, gyroscope and GPS sensors. Athletes performed four skating techniques and three classical techniques on snow at moderate velocity. Data from a single micro-sensor unit positioned in the centre of the upper back was sufficient to visually identify cyclical movement patterns for each technique. The general patterns for each technique were identified clearly across all athletes while at the same time distinctive characteristics for individual athletes were observed. Differences in speed, snow condition and gradient of terrain were not controlled in this study and these factors could have an effect on the data patterns. Development of algorithms to process the micro-sensor data into kinematic measurements would provide coaches and scientists with a valuable performance analysis tool. Further research is needed to develop such algorithms and to determine whether the patterns are consistent across a range of different speeds, snow conditions and terrain, and for skiers of differing ability.
topic accelerometer
gyroscope
kinematics
technique analysis
url http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/12/4/5047
work_keys_str_mv AT dalechapman identificationofcrosscountryskiingmovementpatternsusingmicrosensors
AT colinmacintosh identificationofcrosscountryskiingmovementpatternsusingmicrosensors
AT gordonwaddington identificationofcrosscountryskiingmovementpatternsusingmicrosensors
AT judithanson identificationofcrosscountryskiingmovementpatternsusingmicrosensors
AT keithlyons identificationofcrosscountryskiingmovementpatternsusingmicrosensors
AT finnmarsland identificationofcrosscountryskiingmovementpatternsusingmicrosensors
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