Slips During Gait on Winter Surfaces: Evaluation of Ice Cleat Design and Slip Definition

Current winter footwear provides inadequate protection from slip-related injuries on ice, and there is limited research investigating the optimal design of anti-slip devices. This study examined how ice cleat spike height and position in the heel affect slipping. No differences could be observed bet...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Denbeigh, Kathleen
Other Authors: Fernie, Geoff
Language:en_ca
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/42812
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-428122013-12-03T03:39:13ZSlips During Gait on Winter Surfaces: Evaluation of Ice Cleat Design and Slip DefinitionDenbeigh, Kathleenwinter footwearslipsfallsice cleats0541Current winter footwear provides inadequate protection from slip-related injuries on ice, and there is limited research investigating the optimal design of anti-slip devices. This study examined how ice cleat spike height and position in the heel affect slipping. No differences could be observed between spike conditions, but results demonstrated that heel spikes may prevent slips initiated between heel contact and foot-flat and forefoot spikes may be necessary to prevent foot-flat slips. Further analysis compared slip outcomes measured using two slip onset definitions: 1) heel contact, and 2) the first point of increasing positive heel acceleration. Slip onset defined as time of heel contact overestimated the number of slips and slip distances. These results demonstrate that ice cleats have the potential to protect pedestrians from slipping but some styles available to consumers (i.e. heel spikes only) may not be adequate. Choice of slip definition in footwear evaluations can significantly influence study outcomes.Fernie, Geoff2013-112013-11-22T15:38:18ZNO_RESTRICTION2013-11-22T15:38:18Z2013-11-22Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/42812en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic winter footwear
slips
falls
ice cleats
0541
spellingShingle winter footwear
slips
falls
ice cleats
0541
Denbeigh, Kathleen
Slips During Gait on Winter Surfaces: Evaluation of Ice Cleat Design and Slip Definition
description Current winter footwear provides inadequate protection from slip-related injuries on ice, and there is limited research investigating the optimal design of anti-slip devices. This study examined how ice cleat spike height and position in the heel affect slipping. No differences could be observed between spike conditions, but results demonstrated that heel spikes may prevent slips initiated between heel contact and foot-flat and forefoot spikes may be necessary to prevent foot-flat slips. Further analysis compared slip outcomes measured using two slip onset definitions: 1) heel contact, and 2) the first point of increasing positive heel acceleration. Slip onset defined as time of heel contact overestimated the number of slips and slip distances. These results demonstrate that ice cleats have the potential to protect pedestrians from slipping but some styles available to consumers (i.e. heel spikes only) may not be adequate. Choice of slip definition in footwear evaluations can significantly influence study outcomes.
author2 Fernie, Geoff
author_facet Fernie, Geoff
Denbeigh, Kathleen
author Denbeigh, Kathleen
author_sort Denbeigh, Kathleen
title Slips During Gait on Winter Surfaces: Evaluation of Ice Cleat Design and Slip Definition
title_short Slips During Gait on Winter Surfaces: Evaluation of Ice Cleat Design and Slip Definition
title_full Slips During Gait on Winter Surfaces: Evaluation of Ice Cleat Design and Slip Definition
title_fullStr Slips During Gait on Winter Surfaces: Evaluation of Ice Cleat Design and Slip Definition
title_full_unstemmed Slips During Gait on Winter Surfaces: Evaluation of Ice Cleat Design and Slip Definition
title_sort slips during gait on winter surfaces: evaluation of ice cleat design and slip definition
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/42812
work_keys_str_mv AT denbeighkathleen slipsduringgaitonwintersurfacesevaluationoficecleatdesignandslipdefinition
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