Frontiers in Sports and Active Living (Sep 2020)

Indoor vs. Outdoor Walking: Does It Make Any Difference in Joint Angle Depending on Road Surface?

  • Haruki Toda,
  • Tsubasa Maruyama,
  • Mitsunori Tada

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fspor.2020.00119
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2

Abstract

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Measurement of the joint angle during walking in real-world environments facilitates comprehension of the adaptation strategy corresponding to road surfaces. This study investigated the differences between the joint angles in the lower limb when walking on flat road surfaces in indoor and outdoor environments. Ten healthy young males who walked on a carpet-lined corridor in the indoor environment and on an interlocking block pavement surface in the outdoor environment participated in the study. The joint angles of their lower limbs were measured using seven inertial measurement units, and the average and coefficient of variation (%CV) of the joint angular excursion in the two environments were evaluated. The %CVs of the ankle plantar flexion excursion in the early stance was 45% higher in the outdoor environment compared with that in the indoor, although the spatiotemporal parameters and joint angular excursion of the proximal joints showed no difference between the environments. Though the road surfaces were flat from a macroscopic point of view, the interlocking block pavement had stiffer and more irregular characteristics. The variability in the ankle plantar flexion motion in the early stance may be most likely affected by these surface characteristics in the real-world outdoor environment.

Keywords