People rarely walk in straight lines. Instead, we make frequent turns or other maneuvers. Spatiotemporal parameters fundamentally characterize gait. For straight walking, these parameters are well-defined for the task of walking on a straight path. Generalizing these concepts to non-straight walking, however, is not straightforward. People follow non-straight paths imposed by their environment (sidewalk, windy hiking trail, etc.) or choose readily-predictable, stereotypical paths of their own. People actively maintain lateral position to stay on their path and readily adapt their stepping when their path changes. We therefore propose a conceptually coherent convention that defines step lengths and widths relative to predefined walking paths. Our convention simply re-aligns lab-based coordinates to be tangent to a walker's path at the mid-point between the two footsteps that define each step. We hypothesized this would yield results both more correct and more consistent with notions from straight walking. We defined several common non-straight walking tasks: single turns, lateral lane changes, walking on circular paths, and walking on arbitrary curvilinear paths. For each, we simulated idealized step sequences denoting "perfect" performance with known constant step lengths and widths. We compared results to path-independent alternatives. For each, we directly quantified accuracy relative to known true values. Results strongly confirmed our hypothesis. Our convention returned vastly smaller errors and introduced no artificial stepping asymmetries across all tasks. All results for our convention rationally generalized concepts from straight walking. Taking walking paths explicitly into account as important task goals themselves thus resolves conceptual ambiguities of prior approaches.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbiomech.2023.111840 | DOI Listing |
J Biomech
November 2024
Department of Kinesiology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802 USA. Electronic address:
People with balance impairments often struggle performing turns or lateral maneuvers, which can increase risk of falls and injuries. Here we asked how people's mediolateral balance is impacted when walking on non-straight winding paths. Twenty-four healthy adults (12F / 12M; 25.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biomech
December 2023
Department of Engineering Science & Mechanics, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA.
People rarely walk in straight lines. Instead, we make frequent turns or other maneuvers. Spatiotemporal parameters fundamentally characterize gait.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
September 2023
Department of Engineering Science & Mechanics, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
People rarely walk in straight lines. Instead, we make frequent turns or other maneuvers. Spatiotemporal parameters fundamentally characterize gait.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Artif Intell
October 2022
Research Unit in Gait Analysis and Intelligent Technology (GaitTech), Sirindhorn International Institute of Technology, Thammasat University, Pathum Thani, Thailand.
Emotion recognition is useful in many applications such as preventing crime or improving customer satisfaction. Most of current methods are performed using facial features, which require close-up face information. Such information is difficult to capture with normal security cameras.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
July 2021
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH 43210;
Navigating our physical environment requires changing directions and turning. Despite its ecological importance, we do not have a unified theoretical account of non-straight-line human movement. Here, we present a unified optimality criterion that predicts disparate non-straight-line walking phenomena, with straight-line walking as a special case.
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