4.5 Article

Competitive and Recreational Running Kinematics Examined Using Principal Components Analysis

Journal

HEALTHCARE
Volume 9, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/healthcare9101321

Keywords

principal component analysis; kinematics data; long-distance running; joint angle

Funding

  1. Key Project of the National Social Science Foundation of China [19ZDA352]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81772423]
  3. NSFC-RSE Joint Project [81911530253]
  4. Janos Bolyai Research Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences [BO/00047/21/6]
  5. K. C. Wong Magna Fund in Ningbo University

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This study compared differences in kinematics parameters between competitive runners and recreational runners using principal component analysis, focusing on three directional changes. The findings suggest that running experience influences the variability in kinematics data, which has implications for reducing running injuries and improving running performance.
Kinematics data are primary biomechanical parameters. A principal component analysis (PCA) of waveforms is a statistical approach used to explore patterns of variability in biomechanical curve datasets. Differences in experienced and recreational runners' kinematic variables are still unclear. The purpose of the present study was to compare any differences in kinematics parameters for competitive runners and recreational runners using principal component analysis in the sagittal plane, frontal plane and transverse plane. Forty male runners were divided into two groups: twenty competitive runners and twenty recreational runners. A Vicon Motion System (Vicon Metrics Ltd., Oxford, UK) captured three-dimensional kinematics data during running at 3.3 m/s. The principal component analysis was used to determine the dominating variation in this model. Then, the principal component scores retained the first three principal components and were analyzed using independent t-tests. The recreational runners were found to have a smaller dorsiflexion angle, initial dorsiflexion contact angle, ankle inversion, knee adduction, range motion in the frontal knee plane and hip frontal plane. The running kinematics data were influenced by running experience. The findings from the study provide a better understanding of the kinematics variables for competitive and recreational runners. Thus, these findings might have implications for reducing running injury and improving running performance.

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