Welsh Rugby Union, Westgate Street, Cardiff, Wales.
Sports Med. 2015 Jul;45(7):1065-81. doi: 10.1007/s40279-015-0332-9.
Microtechnology has allowed sport scientists to understand the locomotor demands of various sports. While wearable global positioning technology has been used to quantify the locomotor demands of sporting activities, microsensors (i.e. accelerometers, gyroscopes and magnetometers) embedded within the units also have the capability to detect sport-specific movements.
The objective of this study was to determine the extent to which microsensors (also referred to as inertial measurement units and microelectromechanical sensors) have been utilised in quantifying sport-specific movements.
A systematic review of the use of microsensors and associated terms to evaluate sport-specific movements was conducted; permutations of the terms used included alternate names of the various technologies used, their applications and different applied environments. Studies for this review were published between 2008 and 2014 and were identified through a systematic search of six electronic databases: Academic Search Complete, CINAHL, PsycINFO, PubMed, SPORTDiscus, and Web of Science. Articles were required to have used athlete-mounted sensors to detect sport-specific movements (e.g. rugby union tackle) rather than sensors mounted to equipment and monitoring generic movement patterns.
A total of 2395 studies were initially retrieved from the six databases and 737 results were removed as they were duplicates, review articles or conference abstracts. After screening titles and abstracts of the remaining papers, the full text of 47 papers was reviewed, resulting in the inclusion of 28 articles that met the set criteria around the application of microsensors for detecting sport-specific movements. Eight articles addressed the use of microsensors within individual sports, team sports provided seven results, water sports provided eight articles, and five articles addressed the use of microsensors in snow sports. All articles provided evidence of the ability of microsensors to detect sport-specific movements. Results demonstrated varying purposes for the use of microsensors, encompassing the detection of movement and movement frequency, the identification of movement errors and the assessment of forces during collisions.
This systematic review has highlighted the use of microsensors to detect sport-specific movements across a wide range of individual and team sports. The ability of microsensors to capture sport-specific movements emphasises the capability of this technology to provide further detail on athlete demands and performance. However, there was mixed evidence on the ability of microsensors to quantify some movements (e.g. tackling within rugby union, rugby league and Australian rules football). Given these contrasting results, further research is required to validate the ability of wearable microsensors containing accelerometers, gyroscopes and magnetometers to detect tackles in collision sports, as well as other contact events such as the ruck, maul and scrum in rugby union.
微技术使运动科学家能够了解各种运动的运动需求。虽然可穿戴全球定位技术已被用于量化体育活动的运动需求,但嵌入设备中的微传感器(即加速度计、陀螺仪和磁力计)也具有检测特定运动的能力。
本研究旨在确定微传感器(也称为惯性测量单元和微机电传感器)在量化特定运动方面的应用程度。
对微传感器及其相关术语用于评估特定运动的使用情况进行了系统回顾;对各种技术的不同名称、应用和不同应用环境进行了排列组合。本综述中的研究发表于 2008 年至 2014 年期间,通过对六个电子数据库的系统搜索确定:学术搜索完整、CINAHL、PsycINFO、PubMed、SPORTDiscus 和 Web of Science。这些文章要求使用运动员佩戴的传感器来检测特定运动(例如橄榄球联盟的擒抱),而不是安装在设备上并监测通用运动模式的传感器。
最初从六个数据库中检索到 2395 项研究,其中 737 项结果被删除,因为它们是重复的、综述文章或会议摘要。在筛选剩余论文的标题和摘要后,对 47 篇论文的全文进行了审查,最终有 28 篇符合设定标准的论文被纳入,这些论文涉及使用微传感器检测特定运动的应用。8 篇文章讨论了微传感器在个别运动中的应用,7 篇团队运动提供了结果,8 篇水上运动提供了文章,5 篇文章讨论了微传感器在雪地运动中的应用。所有文章都提供了微传感器检测特定运动的能力的证据。结果表明,微传感器的用途各不相同,包括检测运动和运动频率、识别运动错误以及评估碰撞过程中的力。
本系统评价突出了微传感器在各种个人和团队运动中检测特定运动的应用。微传感器捕捉特定运动的能力强调了这项技术能够提供更多关于运动员需求和表现的详细信息。然而,关于微传感器量化某些运动(例如橄榄球联盟、橄榄球联赛和澳式足球中的擒抱)的能力存在混合证据。鉴于这些相互矛盾的结果,需要进一步研究来验证包含加速度计、陀螺仪和磁力计的可穿戴微传感器检测碰撞运动中的擒抱以及橄榄球联盟中的争球、混战和 scrums 等其他接触事件的能力。