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Journal Article

Citation

Kotsifaki A, Whiteley R, Hansen C. BMJ Open Sport Exerc. Med. 2018; 4(1): e000441.

Affiliation

Department of Neurology, University of Kiel, Kiel, Germany.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, British Association of Sport and Exercise Medicine, Publisher BMJ Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1136/bmjsem-2018-000441

PMID

30622729

PMCID

PMC6307561

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To determine whether a dual-camera markerless motion capture system can be used for lower limb kinematic evaluation in athletes in a preseason screening setting.

DESIGN: Descriptive laboratory study. SETTING: Laboratory setting. PARTICIPANTS: Thirty-four (n=34) healthy athletes. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Three dimensional lower limb kinematics during three functional tests: Single Leg Squat (SLS), Single Leg Jump, Modified Counter-movement Jump. The tests were simultaneously recorded using both a marker-based motion capture system and two Kinect v2 cameras using iPi Mocap Studio software.

RESULTS: Excellent agreement between systems for the flexion/extension range of motion of the shin during all tests and for the thigh abduction/adduction during SLS were seen. For peak angles, results showed excellent agreement for knee flexion. Poor correlation was seen for the rotation movements.

CONCLUSIONS: This study supports the use of dual Kinect v2 configuration with the iPi software as a valid tool for assessment of sagittal and frontal plane hip and knee kinematic parameters but not axial rotation in athletes.

Keywords: Soccer


Language: en

Keywords

3D marker based system; Kinect; kinematics; markerless motion capture

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