Explaining human body responses in random vibration: Effect of motion direction, sitting posture, and anthropometry

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Explaining human body responses in random vibration: Effect of motion direction, sitting posture, and anthropometry
المؤلفون: Cvetković, M. M., Desai, R., de Winkel, K. N., Papaioannou, G., Happee, R.
سنة النشر: 2023
المجموعة: Computer Science
Statistics
مصطلحات موضوعية: Statistics - Machine Learning, Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction, Statistics - Applications, 82Dxx, I.6.5
الوصف: This study investigates the effects of anthropometric attributes, biological sex, and posture on translational body kinematic responses in translational vibrations. In total, 35 participants were recruited. Perturbations were applied on a standard car seat using a motion-based platform with 0.1 to 12.0 Hz random noise signals, with 0.3 m/s2 rms acceleration, for 60 seconds. Multiple linear regression models (three basic models and one advanced model, including interactions between predictors) were created to determine the most influential predictors of peak translational gains in the frequency domain per body segment (pelvis, trunk, and head). The models introduced experimentally manipulated factors (motion direction, posture, measured anthropometric attributes, and biological sex) as predictors. Effects of included predictors on the model fit were estimated. Basic linear regression models could explain over 70% of peak body segments' kinematic body response (where the R2 adjusted was 0.728). The inclusion of additional predictors (posture, body height and weight, and biological sex) did enhance the model fit, but not significantly (R2 adjusted was 0.730). The multiple stepwise linear regression, including interactions between predictors, accounted for the data well with an adjusted R2 of 0.907. The present study shows that perturbation direction and body segment kinematics are crucial factors influencing peak translational gains. Besides the body segments' response, perturbation direction was the strongest predictor. Adopted postures and biological sex do not significantly affect kinematic responses.
Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, conference named "26th IEEE International Conference on Intelligent Transportation Systems ITSC 2023"
نوع الوثيقة: Working Paper
URL الوصول: http://arxiv.org/abs/2306.12115
رقم الأكسشن: edsarx.2306.12115
قاعدة البيانات: arXiv