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The Use of Specks in Gait Analysis Smita Sasindran 1 , Jennifer Walsh 2 , Alison Richardson 2 , Jan Herman 2 , James Hollington 2 1 School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh 2 Anderson Gait Laboratory, SMART Centre, Astley Ainslie Hospital, Edinburgh

The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

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Feasibility Study for evaluating the effectiveness of Orient inertial 3D motion capture wireless devices (developed by the Speckled Computing research group at the University of Edinburgh) for human gait analysis and for identifying deviations from normal gait

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Page 1: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

The Use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Smita Sasindran1, Jennifer Walsh2, Alison Richardson2, Jan Herman2, James Hollington2

1 School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh2 Anderson Gait Laboratory, SMART Centre, Astley Ainslie Hospital, Edinburgh

Page 2: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Gait Analysis • Brief observation to sophisticated measurement

• Patient population• 75% paediatric • Cerebral Palsy• Neurological Disorders• Prosthetics

• Treatment Planning

• Analysis of intervention

Page 3: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Clinical Gait Analysis• One of 2 centres in

Scotland providing clinical gait analysis

• Clinical Gait Analysis– 3D analysis

• Vicon 460

Page 4: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Biomechanical model

• Three markers per body segment

• Markers on joints define two adjacent segments

• Marker placement conducted by physiotherapist

• Markers placed on bony prominences and anatomical markers

Page 5: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Biomechanical model

• Modified Helen Hayes model 3D axis system for each segment

• Sagittal plane angles -Flexion/extension

• Coronal plane angles Abduction/adduction

• Transverse plane angles Internal/external rotation

Page 6: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Phases of Gait

Page 7: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Clinical Gait Analysis

Page 8: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Three-dimensional gait analysis

• Track images from two or more cameras

• Points used to reconstruct original 3D trajectories

Page 9: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis
Page 10: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis
Page 11: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Clinical Gait Analysis• Kinematics

• Angular displacements in 3 planes

• Kinetics• Forces, moments, powers

• Temporal Parameters• Walking speed (m/s)• Cadence (steps/min)• Double/Single support time (s)• Stride length (m)• Step length (m)• Step time (s)

Page 12: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Kinematics

Page 13: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Kinetics

Left Mean Barefoot (Mean Barefoot) Right Mean Barefoot (Mean Barefoot) Avg File 7 (Normals.gcd)

Hip Flexion Moment2.0

-1.0

Flex

Ext

Nm

Knee Flexion Moment2.0

-1.0

Flex

Ext

Nm

Ankle Flexion Moment3.0

-1.0

Dors

Plan

Nm

Fore/Aft Shear Force40

-40

N

Hip Ab/Adduction Moment1.0

-1.0

Add

Abd

Nm

Knee Ab/Adduction Moment1.0

-1.0

Var

Valg

Nm

Ankle Ab/Adduction Moment1.0

-1.0

Add

Abd

Nm

Medial/Lateral Shear Force30

-30

N

Hip Flexion/Extension Power3.0

-2.0

Gen

Abs

W

Knee Flexion/Extension Pow er2.0

-2.0

Gen

Abs

W

Ankle Flexion/Extension Pow er4.0

-2.0

Gen

Abs

W

Vertical Ground Reaction Force140

0

N

Page 14: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Limitations of current methods of Clinical Gait Analysis

• Modelling errors–Centre of knee rotation–Marker placement–Soft tissue movement–Foot modelling

Page 15: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Limitations of current methods of Clinical Gait Analysis

• Practical data collection constraints–Artificial capture environment–Snapshot analysis–Restricted activities–Specialist staff–Intrusive–Expensive

Page 16: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Specks

Page 17: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Potential benefits of Specks for CGA

• Address limitations of current optical motion capture methods

• Provide objective measure of functional ability in every day environments

• Provide ongoing monitoring• Increase national service capacity• Reduce assessment costs

Page 18: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Comparative Results

• Normal Data Collection

• Patient Data Collection

Page 19: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Graph from Specks Graph from Vicon

Pelvic Tilt30

-10

Ant

Post

deg

Comparative Results – Pelvic Tilt

Page 20: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Graph from Specks Graph from Vicon

Comparative Results – Hip FlexionHip Flexion60

-15

Flex

Ext

deg

Page 21: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Graph from Specks Graph from Vicon

Knee Flexion90

-15

Flex

Ext

deg

Comparative Results – Knee Flexion

Page 22: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Graph from Specks Graph from Vicon

Ankle Flexion30

-30

Dors

Plan

deg

Comparative Results – Ankle Flexion

Page 23: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Graph from Specks Graph from Vicon

Pelvic Obliquity15

-15

Up

Dow n

deg

Comparative Results – Pelvic Obliquity

Page 24: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Graph from Specks Graph from Vicon

Hip Adduction20

-15

Add

Abd

deg

Comparative Results – Hip Abduction

Page 25: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Graph from Specks Graph from Vicon

Pelvic Rotation30

-30

Int

Ext

deg

Comparative Results – Pelvic Rotation

Page 26: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Pelvic Tilt30

-10

deg

Patient Data

Page 27: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Knee Flexion90

-15

deg

Patient Data

Page 28: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Pelvic Obliquity15

-15

deg

Patient Data

Page 29: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Hip Adduction20

-15

deg

Patient Data

Page 30: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Pelvic Rotation30

-30

deg

Patient Data

Page 31: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Pelvic Tilt30

-10

deg

Patient Data

Page 32: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Hip Flexion60

-15

deg

Patient Data

Page 33: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Original Curves Zero Mean Adjusted

Page 34: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Original Curves Zero Mean Adjusted

Page 35: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Original Curves Zero Mean Adjusted

Page 36: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Analysis of The Use of Specks in Clinical Gait Analysis

• Format of result in line with Gait Analysis reports

• Integration cumulative error, reset at mid-stance

• Reset orientation of markers• Zero centred magnitudes

Page 37: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Future work

• Anterior/Posterior pelvic tilt • “Root” of calculations

• Position of foot marker

• Orientation of markers

Page 38: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Future Work• Design

–Size

• Transmitting Wire / Internal memory

• Battery life

• Transmission problems

• Segmentation automated for pathological gait

Page 39: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Summary of The Use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Kinematics• Angular displacements in 3 planes

• Kinetics• Forces, moments, powers• Force Transducers

• Temporal Parameters• Walking speed (m/s)• Cadence (steps/min)• Double/Single support time (s)• Stride length (m)• Step length (m)• Step time (s)

Page 40: The use of Specks in Gait Analysis

Thank you for your attention