Affiliation:
1. Department of Veterinary Basic Sciences, The Royal Veterinary CollegeHawkshead Lane, North Mymms, Hatfield AL9 7TA, UK
2. Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, The Royal Veterinary CollegeHawkshead Lane, North Mymms, Hatfield AL9 7TA, UK
Abstract
Walking and running are two mechanisms for minimizing energy expenditure during terrestrial locomotion. Duty factor, dimensionless speed, existence of an aerial phase, percentage recovery (PR) or phase shift of mechanical energy and shape of the vertical ground reaction force profile have been used to discriminate between walking and running. Although these criteria work well for the classification of most quadrupedal gaits, they result in conflicting evidence for some gaits, such as the tölt (a symmetrical, four-beat gait used by Icelandic horses).We use established pattern recognition methods to test the hypothesis that the tölt is a running gait based on anautomated and optimized decision drawn from four features(dimensionless speed, duty factor, length of aerial phase and PR for over 6000 strides from four symmetrical gaits in seven Icelandic horses) simultaneously. We compare this decision with the use of each of these features in isolation.Sensitivity and specificity values were used to determine optimal thresholds for classifying tölt strides based on each feature separately. Duty factor and dimensionless speed indicate that tölt is more similar to running, while aerial phase and PR indicate that it is more similar to walking.Then, two multidimensional pattern recognition approaches, multivariate Gaussian densities and linear discriminant analysis, were used and it was shown that, in terms of stochastic multidimensional discrimination, tölt is more similar to ‘running’. The approaches presented here have potential to be extended to studies on similar ‘ambling’ gaits in other quadrupeds.
Subject
Biomedical Engineering,Biochemistry,Biomaterials,Bioengineering,Biophysics,Biotechnology
Cited by
24 articles.
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