Research article - (2015)14, 215 - 224 |
Reliability of the Elliptical Zone Method of Estimating Body Segment Parameters of Swimmers |
Ross H. Sanders1,2,, Chuang-Yuan Chiu1, Tomohiro Gonjo1, Jacki Thow1, Nuno Oliveira1, Stelios G. Psycharakis1, Carl J. Payton3, Carla B. McCabe1,4 |
Key words: Anthropometry, elliptical zone, error, inverse dynamics, reliability, Paralympic, swimming |
Key Points |
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Obtaining accurate body segment parameter (BSP) data such as segment masses, segment centre of mass positions and moments of inertia is fundamental to calculating the kinematics and kinetics of human motion from anatomical reference points digitised from video. While personalised BSP data may be useful in the analysis of any human motion, it is particularly important in analysis of mid-pool swimming where direct measurement of kinetics is extremely difficult. Net force, the product of the second derivative of whole body centre of mass (COM) position and body mass, can indicate the instantaneous balance between propulsive and resistive forces, thereby enabling an assessment of the effectiveness of technique and the relative contributions by the right and left limbs. Direct measurement of swimming speed has been used to gather this information by attaching a light line to a fixed point on the swimmer’s body, commonly the hips (e.g. Payton and Wilcox, In addition to understanding and assessing technique of able bodied swimmers, quantification of linear and angular kinetics are necessary to explore the effects of disabilities on performance and to shed light on the issue of classification in Paralympic swimming. In many cases, the disabilities create morphological asymmetries which affect the balance of torques acting during swimming, for example, the effect of missing limbs on the roll and pitch of the body in response to bilateral asymmetries in the torques due to gravity and buoyancy. Thus, input of personalised segment BSP data is essential to obtain realistic results. Additionally, change in the anthropometric data themselves is of interest when assessing the effect of body mass, and its distribution, on swimming performance. For this reason it is important to establish the sensitivity of the BSP measurements and the confidence with which changes over time can be detected. Several methods have been developed for estimating BSP data. These include using data based on cadavers (Depster, One method of obtaining personalised estimates of these parameters inexpensively and non-invasively is by modelling segments as a series of ellipses of known depth and diameters (Jensen, The diameters of the ellipses are obtained by tracing the outline of the segments from two photographs taken from orthogonal perspectives. The reliability of the measurements depends on the consistency of tracing those outlines as well as digitising the anatomical landmarks that define each body segment. Reliability of the method is particularly important when the body segment parameter data are used in longitudinal studies in which changes in body morphology and mass distribution are likely. Sanders ( Reliability of the elliptical zone method has been maximised in the past by projecting slides onto large digitising tablets (Jensen and Fletcher, With the advancement in software, enabling user interaction with digital photographs, digitising and tracing of body segments can be achieved readily on personal computers. A MATLAB program (E-Zone) enabling the acquisition of the ellipse diameters and subsequent calculation of body segment parameter data using the elliptical zone method has been developed (Deffeyes and Sanders, E-zone requires only two digital cameras allowing easy availability, low cost, and portability compared with photonic or medical scanners. Digitising and calculations of a subject can be completed within 20 minutes. To date, there is a paucity of data regarding the reliability of the measurements obtained both in terms of within assessor variability and between assessor variability. One of the very few papers to report reliability of these methods was a study of front crawl swimmers by Psycharakis et al. ( The purpose of the current study was to establish the reliability of body segment parameter data obtained using the elliptical zone method with segment endpoints and outlines being digitised and traced manually on a personal computer screen using E-Zone. The contribution to variability of differences between assessors trained in digitising and tracing the body segments, and the contribution to variability of differences within assessors between repeated digitisations and tracings, were evaluated. For application to analysis of both able bodied and Paralympic swimming, establishing the sensitivity of measurement was of particular interest. In future studies of swimming this will inform the confidence with which the effect of bilateral differences on torsional balance, and the effect on performance of longitudinal changes in morphology with exercise and diet, can be assessed. |
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Participants |
Participants in this study comprised 11 single arm amputee swimmers (9 females, 2 males) whose body segment parameter data were required for subsequent video based three-dimensional (3D) analysis of swimming technique. The mass of the nine female single arm amputee swimmers ranged from 44.8 kg to 67.4 kg while the masses of the two male single arm amputee swimmers were 99.1 kg and 71.6 kg ( |
Assessors |
Five assessors digitised and traced the segment outlines from digital photographs of the swimmers. The assessors underwent training to gain familiarity with the MATLAB program ‘E-Zone’ (Deffeyes and Sanders, |
Protocol |
Swimmers were weighed on a set of Seca 712 column scales (Germany) and their height measured (without shoes) on a Seca 225 stadiometer (Germany) ensuring that the spine at lumbar, thoracic and cervical regions was comfortably extended to achieve good natural postural alignment. Segment endpoints and landmarks ( Participants adopted an erect posture with the lumbar, thoracic and cervical spine comfortably extended as described for the height measurement. The chin was elevated sufficiently to ensure that the line from mandible to chin was horizontal. Participants stood on an inclined board so that the feet were sloped at approximately 45 degrees to the horizontal enabling subsequent modelling of the feet as a stack of ellipses. The extended upper limbs were maintained predominantly in the mid-frontal plane with the palms facing forward, fingers adducted and thumb in the neutral position. The upper limbs were positioned sufficiently posteriorly that they did not obscure the hip marker from the side view and sufficiently anteriorly to also avoid obscuring the lumbar region (outline of the swimmer’s back) from the side view. Still photographs were taken simultaneously, using a ‘one, two, three, go’ command, by three digital cameras (Canon PowerShot S1 IS, Sony DSC-V1 and Sony DSC-T5) from front, left side, and right side views ( All cameras had a 4.0 megapixel capacity. Photographs of each swimmer and the horizontal and vertical scales were taken separately without altering camera distances, focal lengths, or settings between photographs. The cameras were set on tripods at a height of 1m and their axes parallel to the horizontal floor surface and at a distance of 10m from where the swimmer would be positioned in order to minimise perspective errors and scaling errors due to the body surfaces being slightly out of the planes in which the linear scales were photographed. The cameras were zoomed to ‘3X’ magnification to maximise the image size for both the swimmer and the scale. |
Data Processing |
Each of the assessors scaled, digitised, and traced each swimmer in a randomised order. The computer screens had a diagonal length of 27.5cm and a resolution of 1280 x 1024 pixels. The E-Zone software (Deffeyes and Sanders, The body segment parameter (BSP) data output from E-Zone included segment volumes, segment masses, segment lengths, segment centre of mass position as a percentage distance between the landmarks, and moment of inertia about the segment medio-lateral (IML), antero-posterior (IAP), and longitudinal/proximal-distal (IPD) axes of the segments. The segments were head, neck, upper trunk, lower trunk, right and left arm, forearm, hand, thigh, shank, and foot. Values were also obtained for combined head and neck and combined thorax and abdomen. |
Data analysis | ||||
Four procedures were conducted to determine mean within assessor variability for each BSP for each body segment;Mean within assessor standard error of the true mean of five digitisations by an individual assessor of each BSP for each body segment; Between assessor variability due to the combined effect of differences in digitising and tracing technique among individuals;The change required between testing occasions in a longitudinal study, using a protocol of five digitisations per testing occasion, to be 95% certain that a real change has occurred. 1.To determine within assessor variability, means and standard deviations (SD) of the five trials of each swimmer were determined for each assessor for each of the BSP variables yielding 55 means and SDs for each BSP of each body segment. The standard deviations were expressed as coefficients of variation (SD/Mean×100) to take into account the magnitude of the measurement. The mean of the SDs and of the coefficients of variation (CV) across the assessors was obtained for each swimmer. The means of these across the 11 swimmers were then determined. 2.For each BSP variable of each body segment the standard error of the mean (SD/√n) of the five digitised trials was determined and expressed as a coefficient of variation of the mean (CVM) calculated as 100×SD/(√5 × Mean). This provided an indication of the reliability of the measurement when a protocol of five repeated digitisations is used and the mean taken as the representative value. This protocol may be adopted in practice where precise measures are required. 3.Means of the five digitisations of each of the five assessors were obtained for each of the 11 swimmers (55 means) for each BSP variable and body segment. Then the SDs and CVs across the five means for each swimmer were obtained as measures of variability between assessors. Means of those SDs and CVs across the 11 swimmers were then obtained as overall estimates of between assessor variability. Given that the total variability between assessors contains some variability due to the errors in the mean of the five digitised trials of the individual assessors, in addition to the systematic variability due to differences in digitising and tracing technique, these were then assessed in conjunction with the standard error of the mean and the corresponding coefficients of variation of the mean. 4.For each variable, an independent
Substituting into the original equation (
Working with coefficients of variation to normalise to percentages of the means as described in 1, and rearranging to determine the difference required to reach 95% confidence that there has been a change, we have In looking at the effects of a nutritional or exercise intervention we would expect a change in a particular direction and hence apply a one tailed test and the value of While the overall means for the measures of variability described above were determined across 11 swimmers, exceptions were the hands and forearms due to the amputations. In the case of the left forearm and hand, means were obtained from the four swimmers whose left forearms and hands were intact and in the case of the right forearms and hands, means were obtained from the seven swimmers whose right forearms and hands were intact. Despite some arms being short due to partial amputation, the mean variability in measures of the right and left arms was obtained from all swimmers regardless of whether the limbs were complete or partial. This did not affect the measures of variability given that the measures of variability were within and between assessors rather than between swimmers. |
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Within assessor reliability |
Mean within-assessor SD, CV, and CVM (results of procedures 1 and 2) for the BSP data of each segment are presented in |
Between assessor reliability |
Mean between assessor SD and CV for BSP data of each segment (results of procedure 3) are presented in |
Change required for 95% confidence |
Mean within-assessor CV and change required to have 95% confidence of a real difference in longitudinally sampled means using a within assessor protocol with five digitisations on each testing occasion (results of procedure 4) are presented in |
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The purpose of this study was to establish the reliability of body segment parameter data obtained using the elliptical zone method with segment endpoints and outlines being digitised and traced manually on a personal computer screen using E-Zone software. An error margin of 5% has been used as a useful criterion for reporting overall reliability in accordance with convention. Within assessor variability indicated by CV for the COM position as a percentage of the distance from proximal to distal joint centres was less than 5% for all body segments. Within assessor variability of segment mass was also less than 5% for all body segments except neck (11.9%), hands (Left:8.1%; Right:5.8%) and feet (Left:7.3%; Right:7.3%). Variability in length was less than 5% for all segments except the neck (5.2%). In the case of the neck the SD was smaller than many of the other segments but the CV was larger due to the segment’s relatively short length. Variability in moments of inertia was larger than the other BSPs. This was due to the calculation being the sum of the local inertia terms of the ellipses and the remote terms. The remote terms in particular are sensitive to error, being the product of mass and squared radii of the ellipse centres of mass from the whole segment centre of mass. Consequently, variability in each of the terms has a compounding effect on the variability of the calculated moment of inertia. Nevertheless CVs were below 5% for the large body segments that have the greatest effect on torque and angular momentum determined from position data. Variability was larger for the small segments in terms of CVs but was small in terms of the magnitude of the variability expressed as an SD. For example the SDs of the IAP and IML moments of inertia of the hands were less than 1/100th of those of the abdomen but the CVs were more than three times those of the abdomen. The between assessor variability data shown in Taking the within assessor contribution into account, the magnitude of the systematic error contribution to total variability among assessors is generally similar to or greater than that of the within assessor variability. Given that differences between assessors tend to be similar to or greater than the within assessor variability it is recommended that, when using E-Zone to monitor changes in anthropometric variables, a protocol should be adopted whereby individuals undergoing repeated longitudinal examinations are assessed by the same assessor. To increase confidence in detecting changes in anthropometric characteristics of individuals, means of multiple digitisations can be obtained and compared across testing occasions. When using a single assessor protocol with five repeated digitisations on each testing occasion, the magnitudes of changes required to be 95% confident that there is a definite change (i.e. for the change to be statistically significant at p < 0.05) are presented in Given the advantages of the elliptical zone method compared to other methods discussed in the introduction and shown in New technologies are enabling further development of volumetric BSP modelling techniques but have not yet been refined and tested sufficiently. These include automatic edge detection to replace manual tracing. However, these methods are subject to variability due to factors such as camera placement, lighting/shadow, contrast conditions due to skin/clothing colour and background. The reliability of the E-Zone method involving manual tracing will provide a benchmark against which the emerging methods can be compared and validated. |
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The elliptical zone method with E-Zone software can be used as a non-invasive and portable method of assessing body segment characteristics. To optimise the reliability of interpreting results, particularly when assessing changes of individuals longitudinally, or when the effect of bilateral asymmetries is being investigated, the same assessor should assess the individual on each testing occasion and means of several digitisations should be used. |
Conflict of interest |
The authors declare that there is no conflict of interest with regard to this paper for any author. |
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY |
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REFERENCES |
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