Influence of averaging time-interval on shoe-floor-contaminant available coefficient of friction measurements.

Appl Ergon

Department of Bioengineering, University of Pittsburgh, Benedum Engineering Hall #302, 3700 O'Hara St., Pittsburgh, PA, 15261, United States; Department of Physical Therapy, University of Pittsburgh, United States; Department of Ophthalmology, University of Pittsburgh, United States. Electronic address:

Published: January 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Available Coefficient of Friction (ACOF) measures footwear traction as the ratio of friction to normal force, but the ideal time-interval for accurate results is unclear.
  • A study analyzed nine shoe-floor-contaminant combinations to determine how repeatable and reliable ACOF values are over four different time-intervals (2 ms, 50 ms, 100 ms, 200 ms) after reaching a target normal force.
  • The findings showed that while differences in repeatability across intervals were minor, shorter intervals (like 2 ms) provided less reliability but improved the ability to predict slips, leading to a recommendation of using a 50 ms interval for better testing efficiency.

Article Abstract

Available coefficient of friction (ACOF) is a common metric of footwear traction performance. ACOF is the ratio of friction to normal force, often averaged over a time-interval. The time-interval needed to achieve repeatable and valid ACOF is unknown. A post-hoc analysis was performed on nine shoe-floor-contaminant combinations to assess the repeatability and bias of data averaged across 4 time-intervals (2 ms, 50 ms, 100 ms, 200 ms) after the target normal force was reached. The ability to predict human slips was assessed for ACOF across these intervals. Differences in repeatability and validity across the four intervals were small. However, statistically significant differences were observed for the shortest compared with the longest interval (lower repeatability yet modestly improved predictive ability). Given the limited impact of time-interval on the results, a shorter interval of 50 ms is recommended to enable testing of smaller floor samples.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6922306PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apergo.2019.102959DOI Listing

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