Centre for Musculoskeletal Research, Department of Occupational and Public Health Sciences, University of Gävle, Gävle, Sweden.
BMC Med Res Methodol. 2012 Mar 25;12:36. doi: 10.1186/1471-2288-12-36.
Upper arm postures are believed to be an important risk determinant for musculoskeletal disorder development in the neck and shoulders. The 10th and 90th percentiles of the angular elevation distribution have been reported in many studies as measures of neutral and extreme postural exposures, and variation has been quantified by the 10th-90th percentile range. Further, the 50th percentile is commonly reported as a measure of "average" exposure. These four variables have been estimated using samples of observed or directly measured postures, typically using sampling durations between 5 and 120 min.
The present study examined the statistical properties of estimated full-shift values of the 10th, 50th and 90th percentile and the 10th-90th percentile range of right upper arm elevation obtained from samples of seven different durations, ranging from 5 to 240 min. The sampling strategies were realized by simulation, using a parent data set of 73 full-shift, continuous inclinometer recordings among hairdressers. For each shift, sampling duration and exposure variable, the mean, standard deviation and sample dispersion limits (2.5% and 97.5%) of all possible sample estimates obtained at one minute intervals were calculated and compared to the true full-shift exposure value.
Estimates of the 10th percentile proved to be upward biased with limited sampling, and those of the 90th percentile and the percentile range, downward biased. The 50th percentile was also slightly upwards biased. For all variables, bias was more severe with shorter sampling durations, and it correlated significantly with the true full-shift value for the 10th and 90th percentiles and the percentile range. As expected, shorter samples led to decreased precision of the estimate; sample standard deviations correlated strongly with true full-shift exposure values.
The documented risk of pronounced bias and low precision of percentile estimates obtained from short posture samples presents a concern in ergonomics research and practice, and suggests that alternative, unbiased exposure variables should be considered if data collection resources are restricted.
在上臂姿势被认为是在颈部和肩部的肌肉骨骼疾病发展的一个重要风险决定因素。角升高分布的第 10 和 90 百分位数已在许多研究中报告作为中性和极端姿势暴露的措施,并且通过第 10-90 百分位范围来量化变化。此外,第 50 百分位数通常被报告为“平均”暴露的措施。这些四个变量是使用观察到的或直接测量的姿势的样本估计的,通常使用 5 至 120 分钟的采样持续时间。
本研究检查了从七个不同持续时间(5 至 240 分钟)的样本中获得的右臂抬高的第 10、50 和 90 百分位的全移位值以及第 10-90 百分位范围的估计全移位值的统计特性。采样策略通过模拟实现,使用发型师中 73 个全移位连续倾斜计记录的父数据集。对于每个移位、采样持续时间和暴露变量,计算并比较所有可能的样本估计值在一分钟间隔内的平均值、标准偏差和样本离散度限制(2.5%和 97.5%)与真实全移位暴露值。
第 10 百分位的估计值被证明是有限采样的向上偏差,第 90 百分位和百分位范围的估计值是向下偏差。第 50 百分位也略微向上偏差。对于所有变量,采样持续时间越短,偏差越严重,并且与第 10 和 90 百分位和百分位范围的真实全移位值显著相关。正如预期的那样,较短的样本导致估计值的精度降低;样本标准偏差与真实全移位暴露值强烈相关。
从短姿势样本中获得的百分位估计值明显偏差和低精度的记录风险引起了人体工程学研究和实践的关注,并表明如果数据收集资源有限,应考虑替代的无偏暴露变量。