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Original Articles

A procedure to refine joint kinematic assessments: Functional Alignment

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Pages 487-500 | Received 18 Jun 2010, Accepted 03 Dec 2010, Published online: 11 Apr 2011
 

Abstract

Functional Alignment is a new method to determine the orientation of a joint's primary rotational axis and the associated movement. It employs three unique concepts. First, data analyses are based upon assessment of spatial positions and not upon movement in a time sequence. Second, analyses are conducted on derived joint rotation matrices instead of tracked markers. This permits reanalysis of published biomechanical results and, therefore, provides a basis for unifying perspectives among different research efforts. Finally, the independent perspectives of the move and base segments require the analysis to use two unique descriptors of the joint axis orientation. These two mathematically necessary descriptors are also shown to be obtainable without reference to the original marker data. The combination of these approaches provides opportunities for additional comparisons of kinematic joint features that have been heretofore underappreciated.

Acknowledgements

We are grateful to Mario Lafortune for granting access to his knee movement data for this presentation. We thank Michael Pierrynowski for helpful discussions during initial phases of this project's development. We remember conversations with Herman Woltring that inspired us during early stages of our biomechanics training.

Notes

1. Email: [email protected]

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Thomas M. Greiner

1

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