Tjønnås Johannes, Seeberg Trine M, Rindal Ole Marius Hoel, Haugnes Pål, Sandbakk Øyvind
Sintef Digital, Trondheim, Norway.
Department of Neuromedicine and Movement Science, Centre for Elite Sports Research, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway.
Front Psychol. 2019 Jun 7;10:1260. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01260. eCollection 2019.
Cross-country skiing is a popular Olympic winter sport, which is also used extensively as a recreational activity. While cross-country skiing primarily is regarded as a demanding endurance activity it is also technically challenging, as it contains two main styles (classical and skating) and many sub-techniques within these styles. To further understand the physiological demands and technical challenges of cross-country skiing it is imperative to identify sub-techniques and basic motion features during training and competitions. Therefore, this paper presents features for identification and assessment of the basic motion patterns used during classical-style cross-country skiing. The main motivation for this work is to contribute to the development of a more detailed platform for comparing and communicating results from technique analysis methods, to prevent unambiguous definitions and to allow more precise discussions and quality assessments of an athlete's technical ability. To achieve this, our paper proposes formal motion components and classical style technique definitions as well as sub-technique classifiers. This structure is general and can be used directly for other cyclic activities with clearly defined and distinguishable sub-techniques, such as the skating style in cross country skiing. The motion component features suggested in our approach are arm synchronization, leg kick, leg kick direction, leg kick rotation, foot/ski orientation and energy like measures of the arm, and leg motion. By direct measurement, estimation, and the combination of these components, the traditional sub-techniques of diagonal stride, double poling, double poling kick, herringbone, as well as turning techniques can be identified. By assuming that the proposed definitions of the classical XC skiing sub-techniques are accepted, the presented classifier is proven to map measures from the motion component definitions to a unique representation of the sub-techniques. This formalization and structure may be used on new motion components, measurement principles, and classifiers, and therefore provides a framework for comparing different methodologies. Pilot data from a group of high-level cross-country skiers employing inertial measurement sensors placed on the athlete's arms and skis are used to demonstrate the approach. The results show how detailed sub-technique information can be coupled with physical, track, and environmental data to analyze the effects of specific motion patterns, to develop useful debriefing tools for coaches and athletes in training and competition settings, and to explore new research hypotheses.
越野滑雪是一项广受欢迎的奥林匹克冬季运动,也被广泛用作一种休闲活动。虽然越野滑雪主要被视为一项要求很高的耐力运动,但它在技术上也具有挑战性,因为它包含两种主要风格(传统式和自由式)以及这些风格中的许多子技术。为了进一步了解越野滑雪的生理需求和技术挑战,在训练和比赛期间识别子技术和基本动作特征至关重要。因此,本文介绍了传统式越野滑雪中用于识别和评估基本动作模式的特征。这项工作的主要动机是为开发一个更详细的平台做出贡献,以便比较和交流技术分析方法的结果,避免定义不明确,并允许对运动员的技术能力进行更精确的讨论和质量评估。为了实现这一目标,我们的论文提出了正式的动作组件、传统风格技术定义以及子技术分类器。这种结构具有通用性,可直接用于其他具有明确界定和可区分子技术的周期性活动,例如越野滑雪中的自由式风格。我们方法中建议的动作组件特征包括手臂同步、腿部蹬动、腿部蹬动方向、腿部蹬动旋转、脚/滑雪板方向以及手臂和腿部动作的能量类度量。通过直接测量、估计以及这些组件的组合,可以识别传统的斜向跨步、双杖推撑、双杖推撑蹬动、八字形以及转弯技术等子技术。假设传统越野滑雪子技术的提议定义被接受,所提出的分类器被证明可以将动作组件定义的度量映射到子技术的唯一表示。这种形式化和结构可用于新的动作组件、测量原理和分类器,因此提供了一个比较不同方法的框架。来自一组使用放置在运动员手臂和滑雪板上的惯性测量传感器的高水平越野滑雪运动员的试验数据用于演示该方法。结果表明,详细的子技术信息如何能够与身体、赛道和环境数据相结合,以分析特定动作模式的影响,为教练和运动员在训练和比赛环境中开发有用的汇报工具,并探索新的研究假设。