IMU Data‐Driven and PCA‐Based Approach to Establish Quantifiable and Practically Applicable Measures for V2 Technique Elements in Cross‐Country Skiing

Author:

Debertin Daniel1ORCID,Haag Luisa12,Federolf Peter1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sport Science University of Innsbruck Innsbruck Austria

2. Department of Mechanical and Process Engineering Offenburg University of Applied Sciences Offenburg Germany

Abstract

ABSTRACTQuantifying movement coordination in cross‐country (XC) skiing, specifically the technique with its elemental forms, is challenging. Particularly, this applies when trying to establish a bidirectional transfer between scientific theory and practical experts' knowledge as expressed, for example, in ski instruction curricula. The objective of this study was to translate 14 curricula‐informed distinct elements of the V2 ski‐skating technique (horizontal and vertical posture, lateral tilt, head position, upper body rotation, arm swing, shoulder abduction, elbow flexion, hand and leg distance, plantar flexion, ski set‐down, leg push‐off, and gliding phase) into plausible, valid and applicable measures to make the technique training process more quantifiable and scientifically grounded. Inertial measurement unit (IMU) data of 10 highly experienced XC skiers who demonstrated the technique elements by two extreme forms each (e.g., anterior versus posterior positioning for the horizontal posture) were recorded. Element‐specific principal component analyses (PCAs)—driven by the variance produced by the technique extremes—resulted in movement components that express quantifiable measures of the underlying technique elements. Ten measures were found to be sensitive in distinguishing between the inputted extreme variations using statistical parametric mapping (SPM), whereas for four elements the SPM did not detect differences (lateral tilt, plantar flexion, ski set‐down, and leg push‐off). Applicability of the established technique measures was determined based on quantifying individual techniques through them. The study introduces a novel approach to quantitatively assess V2 ski‐skating technique, which might help to enhance technique feedback and bridge the communication gap that often exists between practitioners and scientists.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference40 articles.

1. T.Losnegard “Physiological Determinants of Performance in Modern Elite Cross‐Country Skiing” (PhD diss. The Norwegian School of Sport Sciences 2013).

2. H.‐C.Holmberg “The Physiology of Cross‐Country Skiing: With Special Emphasis on the Role of the Upper Body” (PhD diss. The Swedish School of Sport and Health Sciences 2005).

3. Cross-country skiing and running's association with cardiovascular events and all-cause mortality: A review of the evidence

4. Handbook of Sports Medicine and Science: Cross Country Skiing

5. Technique analysis in sports: a critical review

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