Advanced techniques to study foot pressure of healthy young adults
Paper
Paper/Presentation Title | Advanced techniques to study foot pressure of healthy young adults |
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Presentation Type | Paper |
Authors | Al-Daffaie, Kadhem (Author) and Chong, Albert K. (Author) |
Journal or Proceedings Title | Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Information Science and Systems (ICISS 19) |
Number of Pages | 4 |
Year | 2019 |
Publisher | Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) |
Place of Publication | United States |
ISBN | 9781450361033 |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1145/3322645.3322652 |
Web Address (URL) of Paper | https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3322645.3322652 |
Web Address (URL) of Conference Proceedings | https://dl.acm.org/doi/proceedings/10.1145/3322645 |
Conference/Event | 2nd International Conference on Information Science and Systems (ICISS 2019) |
Event Details | 2nd International Conference on Information Science and Systems (ICISS 2019) Event Date 16 to end of 19 Mar 2019 Event Location Tokyo, Japan |
Abstract | This research introduces an innovative alternative statistical methodology to improve the way of conducting human gait analysis using advanced foot pressure capture technology. The developed approach is more efficient than the most commonly used approaches in the field. It enables experts to achieve more accurate results. In addition, it requires less efforts, cost and time. A study was carried out to approve the efficiency of that methodology. Five healthy young adults were voluntary recruited and data were recorded using 300E F-scan insole-sensors. Contact area (CA) and peak pressure (PP) from ten foot regions, i.e. heel, midfoot, first metatarsal (MTH1), second metatarsal (MTH2), third metatarsal (MTH3), fourth metatarsal (MTH4), fifth metatarsal (MTH5), hallux, second toe and third-fifth toes, were analysed. For all of the 20 parameters studied, the proposed approach achieved more accurate results than that used commonly in the literature. |
Keywords | advanced foot pressure technology; human gait analysis; contactarea; peak pressure; data combining; data weighting. |
Contains Sensitive Content | Does not contain sensitive content |
ANZSRC Field of Research 2020 | 490501. Applied statistics |
Public Notes | Files associated with this item cannot be displayed due to copyright restrictions. |
Byline Affiliations | School of Agricultural, Computational and Environmental Sciences |
School of Civil Engineering and Surveying | |
Institution of Origin | University of Southern Queensland |
https://research.usq.edu.au/item/q547z/advanced-techniques-to-study-foot-pressure-of-healthy-young-adults
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