The Agreement between Wearable Sensors and Force Plates for the Analysis of Stride Time Variability

Author:

Slattery Patrick1ORCID,Cofré Lizama L. Eduardo123ORCID,Wheat Jon45,Gastin Paul1ORCID,Dascombe Ben67ORCID,Middleton Kane1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sport, Performance and Nutrition Research Group, School of Allied Health, Human Services and Sport, La Trobe University, Melbourne, VIC 3083, Australia

2. Department of Nursing and Allied Health, School of Health Sciences, Swinburne University of Technology, Hawthorn, VIC 3122, Australia

3. Department of Medicine, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC 3050, Australia

4. Academy of Sport and Physical Activity, Sheffield Hallam University, Sheffield S10 2DN, UK

5. School of Science and Technology, Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham NG11 8NS, UK

6. Applied Sport Science and Exercise Testing Laboratory, School of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Newcastle, Ourimbah, NSW 2258, Australia

7. Sports and Exercise Science, School of Health Sciences, Western Sydney University, Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia

Abstract

The variability and regularity of stride time may help identify individuals at a greater risk of injury during military load carriage. Wearable sensors could provide a cost-effective, portable solution for recording these measures, but establishing their validity is necessary. This study aimed to determine the agreement of several measures of stride time variability across five wearable sensors (Opal APDM, Vicon Blue Trident, Axivity, Plantiga, Xsens DOT) and force plates during military load carriage. Nineteen Australian Army trainee soldiers (age: 24.8 ± 5.3 years, height: 1.77 ± 0.09 m, body mass: 79.5 ± 15.2 kg, service: 1.7 ± 1.7 years) completed three 12-min walking trials on an instrumented treadmill at 5.5 km/h, carrying 23 kg of an external load. Simultaneously, 512 stride time intervals were identified from treadmill-embedded force plates and each sensor where linear (standard deviation and coefficient of variation) and non-linear (detrended fluctuation analysis and sample entropy) measures were obtained. Sensor and force plate agreement was evaluated using Pearson’s r and intraclass correlation coefficients. All sensors had at least moderate agreement (ICC > 0.5) and a strong positive correlation (r > 0.5). These results suggest wearable devices could be employed to quantify linear and non-linear measures of stride time variability during military load carriage.

Funder

Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) scholarship

Publisher

MDPI AG

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