A Comparison of Self-Selected Walking Speeds and Walking Speed Variability When Data Are Collected During Repeated Discrete Trials and During Continuous Walking

Journal of Applied Biomechanics
Marcus J BrownAlan R De Asha

Abstract

A typical gait analysis data collection consists of a series of discrete trials, where a participant initiates gait, walks through a motion capture volume, and then terminates gait. This is not a normal 'everyday' gait pattern, yet measurements are considered representative of normal walking. However, walking speed, a global descriptor of gait quality that can affect joint kinematics and kinetics, may be different during discrete trials, compared to continuous walking. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of continuous walking versus discrete trials on walking speed and walking speed variability. Data were collected for 25 healthy young adults performing 2 walking tasks. The first task represented a typical gait data collection session, where subjects completed repeated trials, beginning from a standstill and walking along a 12-m walkway. The second task was continuous walking along a "figure-of-8" circuit, with 1 section containing the same 12-m walkway. Walking speed was significantly higher during the discrete trials compared to the continuous trials (p < .001), but there were no significant differences in walking speed variability between the conditions. The results suggest that choice of gait ...Continue Reading

References

Aug 31, 2002·American Journal of Human Biology : the Official Journal of the Human Biology Council·R McNeill Alexander
Jun 1, 1964·The Bulletin of Mathematical Biophysics·E H WISSLER
May 19, 2009·Journal of Biomechanics·Sjoerd M BruijnPeter J Beek
Sep 15, 2015·Current Biology : CB·Jessica C SelingerJ Maxwell Donelan

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