Publication | Closed Access
Accuracy of Inertial Motion Sensors in Static, Quasistatic, and Complex Dynamic Motion
104
Citations
18
References
2009
Year
EngineeringMechanical EngineeringAccelerometerMovement AnalysisComplex Dynamic MotionKinesiologyMotion CaptureCalibrationKinematicsInstrumentationHuman MotionInclinometerHealth SciencesPlanar Pendulum MotionInertial SensorsMechatronicsQuasistatic Rms ErrorSensor CalibrationMotion ControlSensorsAerospace EngineeringOdometryGyroscopeMechanical SystemsInertial Motion SensorsHuman MovementVibration Control
Inertial motion sensors (IMSs) combine three sensors to produce a reportedly stable and accurate orientation estimate in three dimensions. Although accuracy has been reported within the range of 2 deg of error by manufacturers, the sensors are rarely tested in the challenging motion present in human motion. Their accuracy was tested in static, quasistatic, and dynamic situations against gold-standard Vicon camera data. It was found that static and quasistatic rms error was even less than manufacturers' technical specifications. Quasistatic rms error was minimal at 0.3 deg (+/-0.15 deg SD) on the roll axis, 0.29 deg (+/-0.20 deg SD) on the pitch axis, and 0.73 deg (+/-0.81 deg SD) on the yaw axis. The dynamic rms error was between 1.9 deg and 3.5 deg on the main axes of motion but it increased considerably on off-axis during planar pendulum motion. Complex arm motion in the forward reaching plane proved to be a greater challenge for the sensors to track but results are arguably better than previously reported studies considering the large range of motion used.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1