Title
Getting the angles straight in speed skating: A validation study on an IMU filter design to measure the lean angle of the skate on the straights
Author
van der Kruk, E. (TU Delft Biomechatronics & Human-Machine Control) 
Schwab, A.L. (TU Delft Biomechatronics & Human-Machine Control) 
van der Helm, F.C.T. (TU Delft Biomechatronics & Human-Machine Control)
Veeger, H.E.J. (TU Delft Biomechanical Engineering; TU Delft Biomechatronics & Human-Machine Control) 
Contributor
van der Helm, FCT (editor)
Jansen, AJ (editor)
Department
Biomechanical Engineering
Date
2016
Abstract
To assist speed skaters in improving their skating performance, we would like to provide them with real time feedback on the orientation of the skate within a single stroke. While of course the forces generated by the skater on the ice determine the acceleration of the skater, the orientation of the skate determines in which direction this force, and thus acceleration, is headed. In this study we focus on the validation of the lean angle measurements of the skate, which distributes the push-off forces over the global vertical and transverse component. To measure this angle, an inertial measurement unit (IMU) would be a logical choice, but two aspects render measuring with commercially available IMUs and their filters on an ice rink rather difficult, first the ferromagnetic materials in the vicinity of the IMU and secondly the large linear accelerations. In this paper we therefore propose filters that bypass these problems. In total three complementary filters with adaptive gain were validated with a motion capture system. The filter based on the assumption that the lean angle can be reset to zero (upright) when there is no change in steer angle of the skate, showed the most accurate results (mean RMSE error of 5.30 and 3.60, for the left and right skate respectively). Integrated into the filter is an IMU based stroke detection, which as a stand-alone system could provide feedback on stroke frequency, stroke length, contact time or double stance phase time. It is concluded that an IMU used with this filter can provide individual elite speed skaters reliable feedback on their skate lean angle.
Subject
IMU
Lean Angle
Speed Skating
Validation measurements
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:58d7c8ab-ab11-4dbb-a93c-b1c71a01615f
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.proeng.2016.06.245
Publisher
Elsevier
Source
Procedia Engineering - The Engineering of Sport 11, 147
Event
ISEA 2016 - The Engineering of Sport 11, 2016-07-11 → 2016-07-14, Delft, Netherlands
Series
Procedia Engineering, 1877-7058, 147
Part of collection
Institutional Repository
Document type
conference paper
Rights
© 2016 E. van der Kruk, A.L. Schwab, F.C.T. van der Helm, H.E.J. Veeger