Abstract
The HumanTrak captures human movement through markerless motion tracking and can be a crucial tool in military physical screening. Reliability was examined in eighteen healthy participants who completed shoulder and hip ROM, and dynamic tasks in three body armour conditions. Generally, for all conditions, good to excellent reliability was observed in shoulder abduction and flexion, hip abduction and adduction, and dynamic squats knee and hip flexion (ICC ≥ 0.75 excluding outliers). Shoulder adduction and hip flexion demonstrated moderate to excellent reliability (ICC ≥ 0.50). Shoulder and hip extension and the drop jump were unreliable (ICC: 0.10–0.94, 0.15–0.89, and 0.30–0.82, respectively) due to the large distribution of ICC scores. Tasks with ROM values ≥ 100° involving movement towards or perpendicular to the HumanTrak camera tended to have greater reliability than movements moving away from the camera and out of the perpendicular plane regardless if body armour was worn.
Practitioner summary: The HumanTrak analyses ROM in a time-efficient manner in a military setting. This study established that shoulder abduction and adduction (no body armour) and shoulder, hip, and knee flexion were the most reliable measurement for all conditions. Further work is required for movements across different planes.
Abbreviations: ROM: range of motion; NBA: no body armour; BA: unloaded body armour; BA9: body armour with 9 kg; RGB: red, green, blue; ICC: intra-class correlation; SEM: standard error of measurement; MDC: minimal detectable change: MSE: mean square error; r: pearson correlations; N: sample size
Acknowledgements
The authors thank all participants who took the time to participate in this research. An additional acknowledgment goes to VALD Performance for the in-kind supply of the HumanTrak.
Disclosure statement
This project received partial funding from VALD; they did not influence the findings or reporting of results.