4.4 Article

Consistent inconsistencies in braking: a spatial analysis

Journal

INTERFACE FOCUS
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsfs.2020.0058

Keywords

anthroengineering; spatial statistics; human movement; centre of pressure

Categories

Funding

  1. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program

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This study quantified the clustering of the center of pressure on the foot during walking and found that the consistency of the location of peak forces on the foot differed between braking and propulsion phases. Contrary to the hypothesis, the center of pressure was more consistent and clustered during propulsion than braking across all participants and trials. This contributes to a better understanding of applied forces on the foot and the mechanisms shaping the modern bipedal form.
The dynamic system that is the bipedal body in motion is of interest to engineers, clinicians and biological anthropologists alike. Spatial statistics is more familiar to public health researchers as a way of analysing disease clustering and spread; nonetheless, this is a practical approach to the two-dimensional topography of the foot. We quantified the clustering of the centre of pressure (CoP) on the foot for peak braking and propulsive vertical ground reaction forces (GRFs) over multiple, contiguous steps to assess the consistency of the location of peak forces on the foot during walking. The vertical GRFs of 11 participants were collected continuously via a wireless insole system (MoticonReGo AG) across various experimental conditions. We hypothesized that CoPs would cluster in the hindfoot for braking and forefoot for propulsion, and that braking would demonstrate more consistent clustering than propulsion. Contrary to our hypotheses, we found that CoPs during braking are inconsistent in their location, and CoPs during propulsion are more consistent and clustered across all participants and all trials. These results add to our understanding of the applied forces on the foot so that we can better predict fatigue failures and better understand the mechanisms that shaped the modern bipedal form.

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