Analysis Of Stilts Movement Research

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around research on stilts movement, focusing on aspects such as walker velocity, frequency of stilts, and step length. Participants explore various ideas to enhance the research, including data analysis techniques and potential experimental approaches.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Experimental/applied

Main Points Raised

  • One participant suggests that the relationship between speed, frequency, and step length may be too simplistic for research.
  • Another proposes investigating the efficiency of walking on stilts relative to height and energy consumption, noting the potential need for specialized equipment.
  • A different participant introduces an optimization problem, discussing energy losses during stilt movement and the possibility of maximizing efficiency based on stilt mass and forward velocity.
  • One suggestion involves analyzing video footage of stilt walking by converting it into stick figure representations to study motion in detail.
  • Another participant recommends using battery-powered lights to enhance video analysis of stilt movement.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of ideas and suggestions, but there is no consensus on a specific direction for the research or the best methods to employ. Multiple competing views and approaches remain in the discussion.

Contextual Notes

Some limitations include the need for access to equipment for measuring energy consumption and the assumptions regarding stilt mass and efficiency that may affect the proposed optimization problem.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be of interest to researchers or students exploring biomechanics, energy efficiency in movement, or those interested in innovative methods for analyzing motion in traditional games.

martinbandung
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Hello all, I'm planning to do a research about stilts movement. I chose it because stilt is a traditional game in my country. In my plan, i want to analyze the velocity of the walker, the frequency of stilts, and the length of steps. I need some other idea to be added to my research. Such as the speed of the walker is equal to frequency of walking multiplied by the length of steps. But is it to simple for a research? I need some ideas to improve my research.

idea that pop up in my mind:
I plot the stilts tip movement position in center of mass frame, so i get the sinusoidal-like graph. I still haven't done the research, but is it necessary to do such Fourier transform to get something more important? I don't get any idea to interpret the data.

thanks for your reply :)
 
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martinbandung said:
Such as the speed of the walker is equal to frequency of walking multiplied by the length of steps. But is it to simple for a research?

I think that would be a rather obvious result.

How about looking at the efficiency of the human vs height? For example do you use less energy walking 5km on tall stilts? That might be too hard because I think you need access to equipment to measure oxygen consumption.
 
How about an optimization problem...

There are two obvious places where motive power is lost for a pair of ideal stilts. One is when a stilt touches down and the person abruptly shifts from moving forward and slightly downward to forward and slightly upward. Assume an inelastic collision and this change in momentum has an associated energy loss. The other energy loss is due to the need to accelerate each stilt forward to get ready to plant it and then backwards to match ground speed. If one assumes that muscles cannot harvest the associated kinetic energy at each stride, these accelerations also result in a loss of energy.

Given some assumptions about stilt mass as a function of length and a particular forward velocity, is there a sweet spot where efficiency is maximized?
 
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Take a video of someone walking in stilts .

Convert this into a series of stick man images and analyse the motion in detail .

You can video normal picture images but better , if you can devise a simple way of doing it , would be to record white dot images against a dark background .
 
Last edited:
Nidum said:
if you can devise a simple way of doing it

Battery powered torch bulbs or bright LED's would probably work well enough .
 
wow thanks for the brilliant idea. i will tell my partner about it. do you mind if i contact you when i need some help?
 
martinbandung said:
do you mind if i contact you when i need some help?

No problem .

Best to post questions openly on forum - then lots of members can join in .
 

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