DocumentCode
1153389
Title
Measurement of Energy Expenditure in Elite Athletes Using MEMS-Based Triaxial Accelerometers
Author
Wixted, Andrew J. ; Thiel, David V. ; Hahn, Allan G. ; Gore, Christopher J. ; Pyne, David B. ; James, Daniel A.
Author_Institution
Centre for Wireless Monitoring & Applications, Griffith Univ., Brisbane, Qld.
Volume
7
Issue
4
fYear
2007
fDate
4/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
481
Lastpage
488
Abstract
Fitness development and performance assessment of elite athletes requires an understanding of many physiological factors, many of these are direct and indirect measures of athlete energy expenditure. Many methods are physiological factor assessments and require the athlete to be constrained by laboratory equipment or periodic interruption of activity to take measurements such as blood samples are required to be taken. This paper presents a method that is entirely ambulatory and noninvasive, using microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) accelerometers. The commonly used output of commercial accelerometer-based devices (known as "counts") cannot discriminate activity intensity for the activities of interest. This, in conjunction with variability in output from different systems and lack of commonality across manufacturers, limits the usefulness of commercial devices. This paper identifies anthropometric and kinematic sources of inter-athlete variability in accelerometer output, leading to an alternate energy expenditure estimator based mainly on step frequency modified by anthropometric measures. This energy expenditure estimator is more robust and not influenced by many sources of variability that affect the currently used estimator. In this system, low-power signal processing was implemented to extract both the energy estimator and other information of physiological and statistical interest
Keywords
accelerometers; energy measurement; gait analysis; kinematics; micromechanical devices; signal processing; sport; MEMS; anthropometric source; athlete performance assessment; biomechanics; elite athletes; energy expenditure measurement; fitness development; gait analysis; kinematic source; low-power signal processing; microelectromechanical systems; triaxial accelerometers; Accelerometers; Blood; Energy measurement; Frequency estimation; Frequency measurement; Kinematics; Laboratories; Manufacturing; Microelectromechanical systems; Micromechanical devices; Accelerometer; biomechanics; energy expenditure; gait analysis; signal processing; sports engineering;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Sensors Journal, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1530-437X
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JSEN.2007.891947
Filename
4105926
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