DocumentCode
1134494
Title
Introducing wearable force sensors in martial arts
Author
Chi, Ed H.
Author_Institution
Palo Alto Res. Center, CA, USA
Volume
4
Issue
3
fYear
2005
Firstpage
47
Lastpage
53
Abstract
In a collaborative effort, the Stanford Taekwondo Program, the Palo Alto Research Center, and Impact Measurement recently developed and introduced sensor technology for the unforgiving environment of the martial arts sparring ring. Our system, called SensorHogu, uses piezoelectric force sensors on body protectors to help Taekwondo judges and referees score tournament matches. We have two objectives for the technology: it should support the judges in accurately scoring the sparring matches, and it should merge with and minimize changes to existing equipment and thus blend into the activity´s background. We are currently working with the World Taekwondo Federation (WTF) and United States Taekwondo Union (USTU) to validate and certify the equipment for tournament adoption.
Keywords
computerised monitoring; force sensors; sport; Impact Measurement; Palo Alto Research Center; SensorHogu system; Stanford Taekwondo Program; United States Taekwondo Union; World Taekwondo Federation; martial arts sparring ring; piezoelectric force sensors; sensor technology; wearable force sensors; Art; Computer displays; Force measurement; Force sensors; Immune system; Protection; Sports equipment; Subspace constraints; Telephone sets; Wireless sensor networks; behavioral changes; evaluation; force sensors; piezo sensors; social acceptance; sports technology; taekwondo; ubiquitous computing; wearable sensors;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Pervasive Computing, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1536-1268
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MPRV.2005.67
Filename
1495390
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