Plethysmographic and anthropometric validation of a 3D body image digitizer to determine body dimensions

Much is known about leg/foot movement times when there is a single target constraint - that in the direction ofthe movement. We report two experiments that investigated the effects of an additional constraint that wasperpendicular to the direction of the movement. In Experiment 1, a standard Fitts�...

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Gorde:
Xehetasun bibliografikoak
Egile nagusia: URQUIDEZ ROMERO, RENE
Beste egile batzuk: Hernandez Torres, Rosa P., Villalobos Molina, Rafael, Ramos-Jimenez, Arnulfo
Formatua: Artículo
Hizkuntza:en_US
Argitaratua: Elsevier 2018
Gaiak:
Sarrera elektronikoa:https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0169814117304353
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Gaia:Much is known about leg/foot movement times when there is a single target constraint - that in the direction ofthe movement. We report two experiments that investigated the effects of an additional constraint that wasperpendicular to the direction of the movement. In Experiment 1, a standard Fitts' task was used but with targetsthat varied in height and, in Experiment 2, we used the Drury tracking task of moving between lines of varyingtrack widths. Results were different to those of arm/hand movements. In experiment 1 the effects of the Indexesof Difficulty (ID) in the direction of, and perpendicular to, the movement direction, were linearly additive. Thisis compared to the ‘greater ID model’ that gives a good description of arm movements. When tracking betweenparallel lines, foot performance is poor compared to arm performance when error rates are controlled. The Drurymodel well describes data for arm and foot movements, when the error rates are controlled, but initial error ratesincrease rapidly with decrease of target width and hence the leg/foot system has difficulty in control at highervalues of amplitude to track width ratio.Relevance to industry: The foot is commonly used for controlling a device. This research demonstrates the effectof having limited width of a target perpendicular to the direction of movement of the foot/leg. Performance iscompared to that of the hand/arm system.