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Articles

The effects of dynamic movement on seated reach arcs

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Pages 691-701 | Received 23 May 2006, Published online: 23 Apr 2008
 

Abstract

The objective of this study was to determine the relationship between movement of the low back and shoulder during a normal seated reach and the reach arc estimation equations found in literature. The method consisted of evaluating individuals who were reaching with their right hands for five chess pawns, which were placed at varying distances. Specifically, the pawns were evenly spaced in a straight line directly in front of each participant's shoulder. This study focused on a group of 32 participants, which included both males and females. For each participant, low back, elbow and two shoulder angles were collected using a PEAK motion capture 6.0 system. Angles were collected in both the sagittal and transverse planes to gain a 3-D perspective. Data were summarised and correlated against maximum reach arc estimates. Results from the data suggest that both the shoulder and low back are engaged much earlier in a person's reach cycle than previously believed. Specifically, the results show low back engagement (trunk/lumber flexion) as early as 50% of maximum reach with the angle increasing to 5° at around 80% and 10° at 93%, which allows more pronounced forward angular acceleration. This shifts the shape and effective area of a participant's reach arc to a ‘dynamic’ state and questions if major muscle recruitment in the torso has initiated. The resulting effect is that dynamic and static reach arcs may vary significantly. While this study is too limited to support formal conclusions, these results strongly suggest a need for further investigation into the limits and impact of dynamic reach.

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