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Inter- and intra-individual variability of ground reaction forces during sit-to-stand with principal component analysis

✍ Scribed by Gianluca Borzelli; Aurolio Cappizzo; Elisabetta Papa


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
138 KB
Volume
21
Category
Article
ISSN
1350-4533

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✦ Synopsis


Variable reduction is an important issue in biomechanics, because the definition of a non-redundant set of variables necessary for a complete description of a given motor act provides information about the motor strategy. A systematic tool for dealing with variable reduction problems is Principal Component Analysis. In this paper, as an example of an application of this technique, the set of Ground Reaction Forces (GRFs) provided by a six-component force plate, gained during standing up in a heterogeneous population of 82 normal individuals, was reduced to a set of fewer variables. Each subject was required to stand up from a chair five times at different, randomly self selected, speeds, obtaining a data set of 410 trials. Principal Components (PCs) of GRFs were computed for each trial. On average, over the ensemble of trials, first and second PCs (PC1 and PC2) explained together 90% of PCs. Inter- and intra-individual repeatability of the first two PCs was investigated by examining the correlation coefficient between PC waveforms obtained from the whole set of trials and within the set of trials performed by the same subject, respectively. While the PC1 exhibited repeatable patterns, the second one, although repeatable within the group of trials performed by the same subject, displayed marked inter-individual variability. Therefore, PC1 was related to intrinsic aspects of the motor task and PC2 to inter-subject features.