| Literature DB >> 35271035 |
Amandeep Kaur Chahal1, Jolene Ziyuan Lim1, Jing-Wen Pan1, Pui Wah Kong1.
Abstract
The present study aimed to investigate the inter-unit consistency and validity of multiple 10-Hz Catapult Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) units in measuring straight-line sprint distances and speeds. A total of 13 participants performed one 45.72-m linear sprint at maximum effort while wearing all eight GNSS units at once. Total run distance and peak speed recorded using GNSS units during the sprint duration were extracted for analysis. Sprint time and peak speed were also obtained from video recordings as reference values. Inter-unit consistency was assessed using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) and standard errors of measurements (SEM). For a validity test, one-sample t-tests were performed to compare each GNSS unit's distance with the known distance. Additionally, Wilcoxon signed-rank tests were performed to compare each unit's peak speed with the reference peak speed measured using video analysis. Results showed poor inter-unit consistency for both distance (ICC = 0.131; SEM = 8.8 m) and speed (ICC = 0.323; SEM 1.3 m/s) measurements. For validity, most units recorded a total distance (44.50 m to 52.69 m) greater than the known distance of 45.72 m and a lower peak speed (7.25 (0.51) m/s) than the video-based reference values (7.78 (0.90) m/s). The present findings demonstrate that there exist variations in distance and speed measurements among different units of the same GNSS system during straight-line sprint running. Practitioners should be aware of the window of errors associated with GNSS measurements and interpret the results with caution. When making comparisons over a season, players should wear the same unit every time if logistically possible.Entities:
Keywords: Global Navigation Satellite System; distance; movement analysis; reliability; speed; video
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35271035 PMCID: PMC8914642 DOI: 10.3390/s22051888
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Each participant wore eight GNSS units at once in the maximal sprint test.
Figure 2Experimental set-up of the sprint test over half a field hockey pitch (45.72 m) with two smartphone cameras recording the performances (Camera 1: 0 to 22.86 m, Camera 2: 22.86 m to 45.72 m).
Figure 3Representative raw speed-time from one participant measured using Kinovea video analysis and one GNSS unit.
Reliability statistical outputs to assess inter-unit consistency.
| GNSS Variables | ICC | 95% Confidence Intervals | SEM |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total distance | 0.131 | [−0.024, 0.556] | 8.8 m |
| Peak speed | 0.323 | [0.101, 0.736] | 1.3 m/s |
Note. ICC denotes intraclass correlation coefficients; SEM denotes standard error of measurement.
Validity of GNSS distance measurements against known distance of 45.72 m.
| GNSS Units | Mean (SD) | Effect Size ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unit 1 (n = 13) | 49.77 (5.92) | 0.030 * | 8.41 | Large |
| Unit 2 (n = 13) | 46.69 (10.62) | 0.747 | 4.49 | Large |
| Unit 3 (n = 10) | 44.50 (8.55) | 0.663 | 5.29 | Large |
| Unit 4 (n = 13) | 52.23 (10.11) | 0.039 * | 5.17 | Large |
| Unit 5 (n = 11) | 52.00 (10.13) | 0.067 | 5.13 | Large |
| Unit 6 (n = 12) | 50.83 (8.57) | 0.063 | 5.93 | Large |
| Unit 7 (n = 12) | 47.50 (8.06) | 0.460 | 5.89 | Large |
| Unit 8 (n = 13) | 52.69 (12.18) | 0.061 | 4.33 | Large |
Note. * Significant differences detected using one-sample t-tests (p < 0.05).
Validity of GNSS peak speed measurements against video analysis.
| GNSS Units | Mean (SD) | Effect Size ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unit 1 (n = 13) | 7.04 (1.15) | 0.057 | 0.604 | Large |
| Unit 2 (n = 13) | 6.89 (1.98) | 0.127 | 0.495 | Medium |
| Unit 3 (n = 10) | 6.92 (1.03) | 0.064 | 0.673 | Large |
| Unit 4 (n = 13) | 7.11 (0.89) |
| 0.780 | Large |
| Unit 5 (n = 11) | 7.37 (1.55) | 0.416 | 0.303 | Medium |
| Unit 6 (n = 12) | 8.40 (2.53) | 0.970 | 0.026 | Negligible |
| Unit 7 (n = 12) | 6.86 (1.34) | 0.064 | 0.615 | Large |
| Unit 8 (n = 13) | 7.37 (1.05) | 0.057 | 0.604 | Large |
Note. * Significant differences detected using Wilcoxon signed-rank tests (p < 0.05). Group mean (SD) of video-based peak speed was 7.78 (0.90) m/s.