Clean Foot Strike
Introduction
A “clean” foot strike indicates that measurements from the force platform can be used for analysis.
This is very important because “bad” forces can cause:
- Bad footstrike events to be created
- Bad kinetic (ground reaction force, joint moments, etc.) calculations
NOTE: It is OK to collect “bad” forces, but it is necessary to tell the software to ignore these bad assignments, but we need at least a few good forces to complete our analysis.
During data collection, clean strikes should be checked visually as the subject steps on the force platform. The user should position the subject so that they will step on the plate, the subject should not aim to step on the plate since this will change their gait.
Force Assignments
How to determine a “good” vs. “bad” assignment:
Examples of GOOD Footstrikes
These are just some examples of “clean” foot strikes. The biggest thing to remember, is that if only one foot comes in to contact with a force platform, the force may be considered good. If anything else (other foot, walker, cane, etc.) comes into contact with the plate during stance, the force assignment should be removed.
Examples of BAD Footstrikes
These are just some combinations of “bad” foot strikes to give you an idea of what you are looking for.
1. One foot half on the plate Since the subject is not stepping entirely on one plate, the force assignment must be removed. |