| Literature DB >> 29748507 |
Francesco Mocera1, Giuseppe Aquilino2, Aurelio Somà3.
Abstract
There is a growing interest in Nordic walking both from the fitness and medical point of views due to its possible therapeutic applications. The proper execution of the technique is an essential requirement to maximize the benefits of this practice. This is the reason why a monitoring system for outdoor Nordic walking activity was developed. Using data obtained from synchronized sensors, it is possible to have a complete overview of the users' movements. The system described in this paper is able to measure: the pole angle during the pushing phase, the arms cycle frequency and synchronization and the pushing force applied to the ground. Furthermore, data from a GPS module give an image of the environment where the activity session takes place, in terms of the distance, slope, as well as the ground typology. A heart rate sensor is used to monitor the effort of the user through his/her Beats Per Minute (BPM). In this work, the developed monitoring system is presented, explaining how to use the gathered data to obtain the main feedback parameters for Nordic walking performance analysis. The comparison between left and right arm measurements allowed validating the system as a tool for technique evaluation. Finally, a procedure to estimate the peak pushing force from acceleration measurements is proposed.Entities:
Keywords: MEMS sensors; Nordic walking; monitoring device; sport engineering
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29748507 PMCID: PMC5982472 DOI: 10.3390/s18051505
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Nordic walking pole: (a) handle; (b) glove; (c) aluminum or carbon fiber body; (d) steel tip.
Hardware components of the monitoring system.
| Component | Device Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Accelerometer | ADXL345 | Acceleration x, y, z |
| GPS | MTK3339 | Position, data, time |
| Load cell | KM26z-500N | Force along |
| Heart rate monitor | Pulse sensor Amped | Beats Per Minute (BPM) |
| Memory | Data storage | |
| Microcontroller | ATMEGA 328P | Device management |
Figure 2Accelerometer reference frame orientation.
Figure 3Integrated load cell.
Figure 4(a) Monitoring system layout; (b) data acquisition Printed Circuit Board (PCB).
Figure 5Typical longitudinal acceleration output measured by the acquisition system.
Figure 6Acceleration data superimposition between each arm.
Figure 7Parallel pushing technique.
Figure 8Force measurements along the longitudinal pole axis.
Figure 9(a) GPS tracking; (b) altitude.
Figure 10Heart rate sensor signal for BPM evaluation.
Figure 11Acceleration-force comparison.
Inertia constant statistical evaluation.
| Number of Samples | Mean Value (kg) | Standard Deviation (kg) |
|---|---|---|
| 20 | 3.6 | 0.3 |