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Lower limb kinematic variability in dancers performing drop landings onto floor surfaces with varied mechanical properties
Authors:Helen K. Reeve  Luke S. Hopper  Bruce C. Elliott  Timothy R. Ackland
Affiliation:1. Dance Science, Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance, London, UK;2. School of Health Sciences, University of Notre Dame Australia, Fremantle, WA, Australia;3. School of Sport Science, Exercise and Health, University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA, Australia
Abstract:Elite dancers perform highly skilled and consistent movements. These movements require effective regulation of the intrinsic and extrinsic forces acting within and on the body. Customized, compliant floors typically used in dance are assumed to enhance dance performance and reduce injury risk by dampening ground reaction forces during tasks such as landings. As floor compliance can affect the extrinsic forces applied to the body, secondary effects of floor properties may be observed in the movement consistency or kinematic variability exhibited during dance performance. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of floor mechanical properties on lower extremity kinematic variability in dancers performing landing tasks. A vector coding technique was used to analyze sagittal plane knee and ankle joint kinematic variability, in a cohort of 12 pre-professional dancers, through discrete phases of drop landings from a height of 0.2 m. No effect on kinematic variability was observed between floors, indicating that dancers could accommodate the changing extrinsic floor conditions. Future research may consider repeat analysis under more dynamic task constraints with a less experienced cohort. However, knee/ankle joint kinematic variability was observed to increase late in the landing phase which was predominantly comprised of knee flexion coupled with the terminal range of ankle dorsiflexion. These findings may be the result of greater neural input late in the landing phase as opposed to the suggested passive mechanical interaction of the foot and ankle complex at initial contact with a floor. Analysis of joint coordination in discrete movement phases may be of benefit in identifying intrinsic sources of variability in dynamic tasks that involve multiple movement phases.
Keywords:Sports surfaces  Dance  Kinematic variability  Vector coding
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