Wobble Board Performance: A Practical and Useful Quantification in Balance Assessment

Author:

Fuchs Philip X.1ORCID,Fusco Andrea2ORCID,Shiang Tzyy-Yuang3,Cortis Cristina4ORCID,Wagner Herbert5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physical Education and Sport Sciences, National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei 106, Taiwan

2. Department of Medicine and Aging Sciences, University “G. d’Annunzio” of Chieti-Pescara, 66100 Chieti, Italy

3. Department of Athletic Performance, National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei 116, Taiwan

4. Department of Human Sciences, Society and Health, University of Cassino e Lazio Meridionale, 03043 Cassino, Italy

5. Department of Sports and Exercise Science, University of Salzburg, 5020 Salzburg, Austria

Abstract

Balance is integral in ankle injury prevention and therapy, especially in high-risk sports like volleyball. For balance assessment, the recommended wobble board (WB) performance (i.e., time at equilibrium) has never been compared with the gold standard. The objective was to investigate the relationships of force-plate-derived center of pressure (CoP) with WB performance and the accuracy of WB-derived CoP estimates. Twelve high-level volleyball players completed six unipedal standing trials on a computerized WB. WB tilt angles and CoP were obtained simultaneously via tri-axis accelerometers on the WB (200 Hz) and a force plate (1000 Hz), respectively. WB performance, polynomial-transformed CoP estimates, and CoP fractal sway, sway area, and mean sway velocity were assessed via Pearson and concordance correlation, root mean square errors, and dependent t-tests. WB performance was related with CoP sway and sway area (|rlinear| = 0.714–0.842, |rnonlinear| = 0.833–0.910, p < 0.01). The strongest concordance (0.878–0.893, p < 0.001) and smallest errors (6.5–10.7%) were reported for anterior–posterior sway and sway area. Moderate to excellent relationships between the WB performance and force plate CoP variables supported the usefulness of WB performance and estimates (especially sway area) in balance assessment. Furthermore, this study presents recommendations for future analyses and modeling approaches to reflect the complexity of postural control.

Funder

National Taiwan Normal University

Publisher

MDPI AG

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