On the variability and dependence of human leg stiffness across strides during running and some consequences for the analysis of locomotion data

Author:

Selvitella Alessandro Maria123ORCID,Foster Kathleen Lois34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mathematical Sciences, Purdue University Fort Wayne, 2101 East Coliseum Boulevard, Fort Wayne, IN 46805, USA

2. eScience Institute, University of Washington, 3910 15th Avenue Northeast, Seattle, WA 98195, USA

3. NSF-Simons Center for Quantitative Biology, Northwestern University, 2200 Campus Drive Evanston, IL 60208, USA

4. Department of Biology, Ball State University, 2000 West University Avenue, Muncie, IN 47306, USA

Abstract

Typically, animal locomotion studies involve consecutive strides, which are frequently assumed to be independent with parameters that do not vary across strides. This assumption is often not tested. However, failing in particular to account for dependence across strides may cause an incorrect estimate of the uncertainty of the measurements and thereby lead to either missing (overestimating variance) or over-evaluating (underestimating variance) biological signals. In turn, this impacts replicability of the results because variability is accounted for differently across experiments. In this paper, we analyse the changes of a couple of measures of human leg stiffness across strides during running experiments, using a publicly available dataset. A major finding of this analysis is that the time series of these measurements of stiffness show autocorrelation even at large lags and so there is dependence between individual strides, even when separated by many intervening strides. Our results question the practice in biomechanics research of using each stride as an independent observation or of sub-selecting strides at small lags. Following the outcome of our analysis, we strongly recommend caution in doing so without first confirming the independence of the measurements across strides and without confirming that sub-selection does not produce spurious results.

Funder

NSF DMS/NIGMS - RUI: Collaborative Research: DMS/NIGMS 1: The mathematical laws of morphology and biomechanics through ontogeny

NSF-Simons Center for Quantitative Biology - Northwestern University Pilot Project Grant | On the mathematical and physical laws of the morphology and biomechanics of mourning geckos through ontogeny

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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