Determination of External Forces in Alpine Skiing Using a Differential Global Navigation Satellite System

In alpine ski racing the relationships between skier kinetics and kinematics and their effect on performance and injury-related aspects are not well understood. There is currently no validated system to determine all external forces simultaneously acting on skiers, particularly under race conditions...

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Main Authors: Erich Müller, Josef Kröll, Julien Chardonnens, Jörg Spörri, Matthias Gilgien
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-08-01
Series:Sensors
Subjects:
GPS
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/13/8/9821
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spelling doaj-2cdb6eaae8704f459d9dcbf3de0271872020-11-25T01:18:24ZengMDPI AGSensors1424-82202013-08-011389821983510.3390/s130809821Determination of External Forces in Alpine Skiing Using a Differential Global Navigation Satellite SystemErich MüllerJosef KröllJulien ChardonnensJörg SpörriMatthias GilgienIn alpine ski racing the relationships between skier kinetics and kinematics and their effect on performance and injury-related aspects are not well understood. There is currently no validated system to determine all external forces simultaneously acting on skiers, particularly under race conditions and throughout entire races. To address the problem, this study proposes and assesses a method for determining skier kinetics with a single lightweight differential global navigation satellite system (dGNSS). The dGNSS kinetic method was compared to a reference system for six skiers and two turns each. The pattern differences obtained between the measurement systems (offset ± SD) were −26 ± 152 N for the ground reaction force, 1 ± 96 N for ski friction and −6 ± 6 N for the air drag force. The differences between turn means were small. The error pattern within the dGNSS kinetic method was highly repeatable and precision was therefore good (SD within system: 63 N ground reaction force, 42 N friction force and 7 N air drag force) allowing instantaneous relative comparisons and identification of discriminative meaningful changes. The method is therefore highly valid in assessing relative differences between skiers in the same turn, as well as turn means between different turns. The system is suitable to measure large capture volumes under race conditions.http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/13/8/9821forcekineticskinematicsGPSglobal navigation satellite systemtechnical validationprecisionalpine skiing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Erich Müller
Josef Kröll
Julien Chardonnens
Jörg Spörri
Matthias Gilgien
spellingShingle Erich Müller
Josef Kröll
Julien Chardonnens
Jörg Spörri
Matthias Gilgien
Determination of External Forces in Alpine Skiing Using a Differential Global Navigation Satellite System
Sensors
force
kinetics
kinematics
GPS
global navigation satellite system
technical validation
precision
alpine skiing
author_facet Erich Müller
Josef Kröll
Julien Chardonnens
Jörg Spörri
Matthias Gilgien
author_sort Erich Müller
title Determination of External Forces in Alpine Skiing Using a Differential Global Navigation Satellite System
title_short Determination of External Forces in Alpine Skiing Using a Differential Global Navigation Satellite System
title_full Determination of External Forces in Alpine Skiing Using a Differential Global Navigation Satellite System
title_fullStr Determination of External Forces in Alpine Skiing Using a Differential Global Navigation Satellite System
title_full_unstemmed Determination of External Forces in Alpine Skiing Using a Differential Global Navigation Satellite System
title_sort determination of external forces in alpine skiing using a differential global navigation satellite system
publisher MDPI AG
series Sensors
issn 1424-8220
publishDate 2013-08-01
description In alpine ski racing the relationships between skier kinetics and kinematics and their effect on performance and injury-related aspects are not well understood. There is currently no validated system to determine all external forces simultaneously acting on skiers, particularly under race conditions and throughout entire races. To address the problem, this study proposes and assesses a method for determining skier kinetics with a single lightweight differential global navigation satellite system (dGNSS). The dGNSS kinetic method was compared to a reference system for six skiers and two turns each. The pattern differences obtained between the measurement systems (offset ± SD) were −26 ± 152 N for the ground reaction force, 1 ± 96 N for ski friction and −6 ± 6 N for the air drag force. The differences between turn means were small. The error pattern within the dGNSS kinetic method was highly repeatable and precision was therefore good (SD within system: 63 N ground reaction force, 42 N friction force and 7 N air drag force) allowing instantaneous relative comparisons and identification of discriminative meaningful changes. The method is therefore highly valid in assessing relative differences between skiers in the same turn, as well as turn means between different turns. The system is suitable to measure large capture volumes under race conditions.
topic force
kinetics
kinematics
GPS
global navigation satellite system
technical validation
precision
alpine skiing
url http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/13/8/9821
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