Measurement of Heel-Rise Test Results using a Mobile Device
Ivan Miguel Pires
1,2
, Márcia Andrade
1
, Nuno M. Garcia
1,3
,
Rute Crisóstomo
4,5,6
and Francisco Florez-Revuelta
7
1
Instituto de Telecomunicações, University of Beira Interior, Covilhã, Portugal
2
Altranportugal, Lisbon, Portugal
3
ECATI, Universidade Lusófona de Humanidades e Tecnologias, Lisbon, Portugal
4
Laboratório de Biomecânica e Morfologia Funcional (LBMF), Faculdade de Motricidade Humana,
Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal
5
Centro Interdisciplinar Para o Estudo da Performance Humana (CIPER), Faculdade de Motricidade Humana,
Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal
6
Instituto Politécnico de Castelo Branco, Escola Superior de Saúde Dr. Lopes Dias, Castelo Branco, Portugal
7
Faculty of Science, Engineering and Computing, Kingston University, Kingston upon Thames, U.K.
Keywords: Mobile Application, Heel-Rise Test, Measurement of Fatigue, Physiotherapy, Physical Exercise, Heel,
Android, iOS.
Abstract: The heel-rise test measures the ability to perform eccentric and concentric muscle actions of the plantar
flexor muscles with unilaterally consecutive elevations of the heel. This test is easy to administer and is a
non-invasive test for strength and endurance of the calf muscle. Despite the part that this test has proven
reliability, it has been difficult to measure its results, as it depends on the subjectivity of the examiner and
conditions of the place of testing. This research consists in the design and development of a mobile
application for the heel-rise test. The algorithm makes use of sensors to measure the exercise, implementing
the rules to detect a pattern of the accelerometry sensors during the test. The heel-rise test consists in
detecting periodically the number of correct exercise repetitions. Then, physiotherapists can use this heel-
rise automatic test in their examinations.
1 INTRODUCTION
Technology is nowadays widely used in people’s
daily life to support their work and improve their
quality of life. During the last years, the use of
smartphones or portable devices has increased
(eMarketer, 2014), connecting people to the digital
world anywhere at anytime. Most of these devices
incorporate embedded sensors that capture signals at
real-time and that can be used to improve health,
detect falls and monitor activities of daily living.
These technologies and services establish what is
usually named as Ambient Assisted Living.
Mobile applications are software components
with less functionality than desktop software and
that are specially designed for a specific task, due to
the fact that mobile devices have some limitations
(Biel et al., 2010). Mobile applications have an
important impact on society, but their use depends
on several factors, such as screen resolution,
hardware limitations, expensive data usage,
connectivity issues, and limited interaction
possibilities. (Islam et al., 2010).
Sensors can help to identify physical activities
and their consequent effects such as fatigue, cardiac
arrhythmia, among others (Moran and Marshall,
2006). On the other hand, the regular physical
activity is important to reduce the risk of some
diseases, such as obesity, cardiovascular accidents,
diabetes, Parkinson, chronic diseases… (Thompson
et al., 2003). Mobile devices acquire data related to
the activities performed and analyse that data to
identify the type of activity performed by the user.
The activity detection consists of different phases,
such as pre-processing, minimization of noise, and
classification of the collected data, related to some
task, using statistical methods or other methods,
such as machine learning or pattern recognition.
Usually, the equipment must be positioned in a
specific location of the user’s body for better
9
Miguel Pires I., Andrade M., M. Garcia N., Crisóstomo R. and Florez-Revuelta F..
Measurement of Heel-Rise Test Results using a Mobile Device.
Copyright
c
2015 SCITEPRESS (Science and Technology Publications, Lda.)
recognition. Adequate automatic methods allow, in
some cases, monitoring and treating health problems
easier and more accurate than manual methods.
However, for an acceptance by the medical
communities, these technologies must be medically
validated (Barton, 2012, Brusco, 2012).
In physiotherapy, the use of some tests to assess
health dysfunction and physiological parameters is
common. For instance, the Heel-Rise Test is used to
detect muscular fatigue. The Heel-Rise Test consists
in the ability to perform eccentric and consecutive
concentric actions of the ankle plantar flexor
muscles with maximum heel elevation possible
(Sman et al., 2014, Yocum et al., 2010). Currently,
due to the inexistence of automatic methods using
technological devices, the exercise related to the
Heel-Rise Test needs the presence of an examiner
that observes and validates the exercise performed
by the patient. The measurement of the heel-rise test
needs external devices to control the time between
the repetitions, for example a metronome or other
counting device, and needs a previous evaluation
and preparation of some physical conditions.
This work presents the design of an automatic
algorithm for the Heel-Rise Test and its
implementation in a mobile application. The
developed mobile application makes use of pattern
recognition techniques to measure the number of
correct repetitions performed during the test with the
mobile device attached to the user’s waist. This test
is easy, inexpensive and non-invasive. The
development of this mobile application has a
validated algorithm. The validation of the algorithm
consists in the readings from the mobile device’s
accelerometer comparing the results the readings
from an external tri-axial accelerometer and a force
platform.
This study uses data collected with the
collaboration of the Assisted Living computing and
Telecommunications Laboratory (ALLab), which is
part of the Institute of Telecommunications, located
in the University of Beira Interior, in Covilhã, and
the Escola Superior de Saúde Dr. Lopes Dias, which
belongs to the Polytechnic Institute of Castelo
Branco.
This paper is organized as follows: in section 2,
some research studies, carried out by other authors,
about the Heel-Rise Test are presented. Section 3
presents the details about the automatic method for
Heel-Rise Test. In section 4, the current results
about the mobile application and algorithm created
are discussed. The conclusions about this study are
presented in the section 5.
2 RELATED WORK
Physiotherapists, use the Heel-Rise Test (Veilleux et
al., 2012a) to identify muscle fatigue by studying the
number of repetitions of heel-rise movements until
the user achieves muscular fatigue This test allows
them to relate the results with specific health
problems.
The Heel-Rise Test can be used to assess muscle
strength, endurance, fatigue, and balance and
equilibrium of the whole body (Sole et al., 2010).
The protocol to be applied in this test is an
elevation as high as possible with knee test member
in extension (Segura-Orti and Martinez-Olmos,
2011) with people’s barefoot, every two seconds
(Silbernagel et al., 2010), controlled with a
metronome. The contralateral foot is kept just above
the ground (Segura-Orti and Martinez-Olmos, 2011).
Before the test, the examiner will do 5 repetitions for
exemplification and then the participants will try to
maintain balance on one foot, touching the wall with
his fingertips, flexed arms to shoulder height to
avoid leaning hard against the wall, and, finally, they
will perform transfers weight (Österberg et al., 1998,
Segura-Orti and Martinez-Olmos, 2011, Yocum et
al., 2010). Then, the participants make 2 repetitions
to identify the maximum elevation obtained during
these repetitions, followed by a 5-minute-break to
start the test (Yocum et al., 2010). In the training
repetitions, the maximum height achieved by the
participant will be marked on the wall above the
participant's head, giving the objective of reaching
the mark in each repetition (Yocum et al., 2010).
Thus, the measurement of the Heel-Rise Test
consists of the number of repetitions that the
exercise is correctly performed (Yocum et al., 2010).
So, according to (Segura-Orti and Martinez-Olmos,
2011, Yocum et al., 2010), the test will be suspended
when:
The participant says to stop;
The force of the knee flexion, according to
the observation of the examiner;
The member is pushing against a wall,
according to the observation of the
examiner;
The participant fails to reach 50% of height
marked on the wall;
The contralateral limb touches the ground
or misses the rhythm of the metronome on
2 consecutive repetitions.
This test has some variations, such as the single
heel-rise test and the double heel-rise test. The
Single-Leg Heel-Rise Test may also be a useful
performance measure regarding footwear or other
PhyCS2015-DoctoralConsortium
10
therapeutic interventions, as it incorporates elements
of both the late stance phase when sensory input is
gathered and the more challenging heel-off phase of
the gait.
It is also important to assess the calf-muscle
performance (Crossley et al., 2007). During this test,
participants maximally raised their heel off the floor,
returning to the floor at a rate of 1 heel rise every 2
seconds. Five practice heel rises were performed
followed by a 1-minute rest prior to the actual test.
The participant was asked to perform as many heel
rises as possible. Repetitions were counted each time
the foot went back to the ground. The test was
terminated if the participant leaned forward with a
force greater than 2% of the body weight, the
participant’s knee flexed, or the participant failed the
time with contact to the ground during three
consecutive heel rises.
Chen et al. (Chen et al., 2012) created a three-
dimensional musculoskeletal finite element model of
the foot to quantify the precise role of the
gastrocnemius–soleus complex in terms of
biomechanical response of the foot, which
corresponds to a muscle-demanding posture during
heel rise, with simulated activation of major
extrinsic plantar flexors. This model can measure the
force necessary to do the exercise and the posture
during the exercise. In (Dutta et al., 2012),
electromyography is employed in the heel-rise test,
measuring the muscular fatigue with good accuracy.
The heel-rise test rates ankle plantar flexor
strength from 0 to 5 according to the number of heel
rises that the subject is able to complete (Caudill et
al., 2010). Performance of 20 repetitions
corresponds to a maximum score of 5, whereas a
score of 2 corresponds to full range of antigravity
ankle plantar flexion motion. Therefore, the
recommended number of heel-rise repetitions for
adult people is 25 (Lunsford and Perry, 1995, Gefen
et al., 2002), as the standard for a score of 5, until
the person becomes fatigued. In (Lunsford and
Perry, 1995) the average number of standing heel-
rise repetitions completed was 28.
The results of Heel-Rise Test consist in the
number of repetitions of the exercise. Only 25
consecutive repetitions are recommended (Bennett et
al., 2012). The test has different stop criteria, such as
the occurrence of the knee flexion, the elbow or
wrist flexion during three times, the failure to
contact the string for three consecutive repetitions,
or the inability to continue due to fatigue (Bennett et
al., 2012).
The authors of (van Uden et al., 2005) verified
that patients with severe chronic venous
insufficiency had a significantly lower number of
heel rises, indicating decreased calf muscle
endurance.
Besides, results of the test can be influenced by
using a medial hind foot wedge in the barefoot
condition, which causes a decrease of the
performance during the task (Sole et al., 2010). The
rheumatoid arthritis on foot function also affects the
delay of heel-rise, causing the decreasing of the
performance too (Turner et al., 2006).
Other studies were performed to test the
reliability of the Heel-Rise Test and obtain the
muscle endurance in patients with chronic diseases
(Pieper et al., 2008), cerebral palsy (Russell et al.,
2007), lateralized neuromuscular perturbation
(Vuillerme and Boisgontier, 2010), Achilles Tendon
Rupture (Silbernagel et al., 2010), hemodialysis
(Segura-Orti and Martinez-Olmos, 2011), peripheral
arterial occlusive disease (Monteiro et al., 2013),
and other diseases (Veilleux et al., 2012b).
Sensors can help in the measurement of the
Heel-Rise Test results, e.g. measuring the angle and
knee motions with kinetic measuring devices
(Hastings et al., 2013, Haber, 2004, Sman et al.,
2014) and electromyograms (Kasahara et al., 2007),
showing that the repeated motion method estimates
muscle endurance rather than the muscle power. The
accelerometry signal is useful to detect the pattern of
Heel-Rise Test and validate the exercise, as showed
in (Schmid et al., 2011, Österberg et al., 1998), with
good accuracy, without interaction of the examiner.
3 AUTOMATIC HEEL-RISE TEST
The proposed solution consists in a mobile
application to perform the Heel-Rise Test with good
accuracy. The application uses an accelerometer
embedded in a mobile device and shows the
processed results of the Heel-Rise Test.
3.1 Detection of Activities using
Accelerometers
The accelerometer is an instrument capable of
capturing the instant acceleration of a subject’s body
or an object. This data can later be processed to
identify activities of daily living using different
techniques, such as pattern recognition or machine
learning techniques. The captured data needs to be
pre-processed, smoothed (reducing the noise) and
classified.
Different authors have made studies about the
relation of the accelerometry data and the detection
MeasurementofHeel-RiseTestResultsusingaMobileDevice
11
of daily activities. In (Chernbumroong et al., 2011)
neural networks and decision trees are used to detect
the daily activities using only a wrist-worn
accelerometer with an accuracy of 94.13%.
In (Andreas et al., 2014) both accelerometers and
gyroscopes are used in different body locations for
activity recognition. Best results were obtained using
a single sensor in the hand and the worst ones when
located in the arm.
Fulk et al. (Fulk et al., 2012) proposed a novel
shoe-based sensor system to identify different
functional postures in people with stroke disease,
that consists of five force sensitive resistors built
into a flexible insole and an accelerometer on the
back of the shoe. The system measures the pressure
and accelerometer data and sends the data via
Bluetooth to a smartphone, identifying sitting,
standing and walking activities with an accuracy,
precision and recall greater than 95% (Fulk et al.,
2012).
3.2 Method Implemented
The mobile application receives the values of the
outputs (X, Y and Z) of the tri-axial embedded
accelerometer and calculates the magnitude of the
vector at every moment.
The implemented algorithm incorporates the
conditions of the regular test (supervised by an
examiner) and some rules specifically obtained by
the accelerometry signal. In the mobile device’s
accelerometer, the values of the outputs and the
values of the magnitude of vectors are in m/s
2
.
A correct exercise should present variations of
the acceleration similar to the example in figure 1.
Figure 1: Representation of the acceleration values of a
repetition of the exercise during the Heel-Rise Test. The
vertical axis represents the values of the magnitudes of the
vectors of all the outputs acquired by the accelerometer
(values in m/s
2
). The horizontal axis represents time in
milliseconds.
The creation of the algorithm requires a learning
phase in order to identify the relevant features. The
collection of data starts with a beep signal that
indicates the time to start. After the beep signal, the
user has 2 seconds to perform the exercise that is
part of the Heel-Rise Test. This test consists in a
repetition of consecutive maximum heel elevations
(Sman et al., 2014, Yocum et al., 2010), performing
eccentric and concentric muscle actions of the
plantar flexor muscles. This algorithm consists in the
validation of each repetition, stopping the algorithm
and playing an acoustic signal after the user fails the
exercise in 2 consecutive repetitions.
The accelerometer data is collected at time
intervals of 2 seconds. After this time, the algorithm
implemented in the mobile application evaluates the
collected data to verify the validity of the exercise.
The validation is done with a recursive algorithm for
peak detection, to detect the maximum peak
acceleration values and the minimum depressive
acceleration values.
The exercise is validated with a sequence of
rules, which are:
1. Collect the data of the smartphone
accelerometer, after beep signal (figure 2-
A);
2. Verify if the value of the point at the start
of data collection is comprised between
Earth’s gravity with a margin of the
correction value (9.81±1 m/s
2
). If the value
is out of this range the algorithm assign a
fail. This comparison was performed to
verify if people is in movement, when they
should start an repetition of the exercise of
Heel-Rise Test;
3. Verify if the value of the point at the end of
data collection is comprised between
Earth’s gravity with a margin of the
correction value (9.81±1 m/s
2
). If the value
is out of this range the algorithm assign a
fail. This comparison was performed to
verify if people is in movement, when they
should has in a static position, because they
ended an repetition of the exercise of Heel-
Rise Test;
4. Detect the maximum peak acceleration
values, recursively, until obtain only one
point of maximum peak is obtained (figure
2-D);
5. Detect the minimum depressive
acceleration values, recursively, until obtain
only one point of minimum depression
(figure 2-C);
6. Verify if during the time interval exists
points higher or smaller than the values
comprised between Earth’s gravity with a
margin of the correction value (9.81±1
m/s
2
). If all peaks are in the range, the
PhyCS2015-DoctoralConsortium
12
algorithm assign a fail;
7. Verify if the instant of time related to the
point of maximum peak (figure 2 - D) is
higher than the instant of time related to the
point of minimum depression (figure 2 - C).
If the algorithm doesn’t pass in this
condition, a fail is assigned;
8. Verify if the time interval between the
instant of beep signal (figure 2 - A) and the
instant of landing (figure 2 - D) is smaller
than 2 seconds. If the algorithm doesn’t
pass in this condition, a fail is assigned.
Figure 2: Representation of the acceleration values (in
m/s
2
) of a repetition of the exercise of Heel-Rise Test with
points marked in the graph. The point A represents the
time instant (in milliseconds) of the beep signal. The point
B represents the time instant (in milliseconds) of take-off.
The point C represents the time instant (in milliseconds) of
peak. The point D represents the time instant of landing.
The validation is done on each repetition of the
exercise. During this sequence of analysis, the
algorithm stops when 2 consecutive failed
repetitions of the exercise of Heel-Rise Test are
verified.
For further analysis, various time intervals are
identified, such as the time of preparation, time of
take-off and the time of landing (figure 3). Each
repetition of the exercise consists of the sequence of
these time intervals. The time of preparation is the
time interval between the instant of the beep signal
and the instant when the user starts the movement.
The time of take-off is the time interval between the
instant when the user starts the movement and the
instant when the user ends the heel elevation,
corresponding to the rise time. The time of landing
is the time interval between the instant when the user
ends the heel elevation and the instant when the heel
of the user returns to the ground.
During the repetitions of the exercise, the time of
preparation and the time of take-off increase, and
this increases the probability of fails during the
Heel-Rise Test. On the other hand, the time of
landing decreases throughout time, because the user,
due to fatigue, falls faster to the ground than at the
beginning of the test.
Figure 3. Representation of the acceleration values (in
m/s
2
) of a repetition of the exercise of Heel-Rise Test with
time intervals marked in the graph. The time interval (in
milliseconds) between points A and B is considered the
time of preparation. The time interval (in milliseconds)
between points B and C is considered the time of take-off.
The time interval (in milliseconds) between points C and
D is considered the time of landing.
When the test is finished, the results are showed
to the user and saved for future analysis. The results
consists of the time elapsed when the algorithm is
stopped, the number of repetitions of the exercise
and the time that the user has been active. The
algorithm shows more reliability and accuracy than
the regular method with the check of the examiner,
because, with an accelerometer, it is possible to
detect movements impossible to detect by an
examiner observing the exercise, e.g., during the
tests the person moves slightly against the wall and
the examiner doesn’t see, but the mobile application
detects this and considers it as a fail, invalidating the
exercise.
3.3 Mobile Application
The mobile application for this work was developed
for Android and iOS operating systems, using hybrid
development technologies. The platform used for the
development, named Cordova (developed by
Apache) (Foundation, 2014), allows to develop the
application using Web programming languages,
such as HTML, JavaScript and XML, which works
as a native application running in a WebView using
native components to access to the sensors data.
One of the requirements is that the application
should have a friendly interface and good usability.
The measurement is activated with an easy selection
using a big button in the center of the screen, which
also shows the state of the capture.
The screens of the mobile application developed
are showed in Figure 4.
MeasurementofHeel-RiseTestResultsusingaMobileDevice
13
(a) (b) (c)
(d) (e)
Figure 4: Interfaces of the mobile application.
When the application starts, the state of the
mobile application is “Standby”, as showed in
Figure 4a. When the user press the start button,
showed in figure 4a, the status of the mobile
application switches to “Waiting” (figure 4b), and
this state remains while the user positions the mobile
device on the waist, before the beep signal. After
this time, the capture and processing of the
accelerometer signal will start, changing to the
“Capturing” state (figure 4c). During this time, the
user must perform the exercises. During the test, the
number of the repetitions of the exercise performed
will be showed. A beep signal is issued every 2
seconds to control the time when the user must
perform the repetitions of the exercise.
In the settings screen, showed in figure 4d, the
user is able to change the language of the mobile
application, enable or disable the sound and change
the time interval that elapses before the capture is
started (after pressing the start button). The
languages available are English, Portuguese, Spanish
and French. The labels related to the state of the
capture switch between “Standby”, “Waiting”,
“Capturing” and the number of repetitions of the
exercise performed.
In figure 4e, the results of the tests performed are
showed and the user can remove the history data of
the Heel-Rise Tests performed.
4 DISCUSSION
The Heel-Rise Test has easy administration and
inexpensive costs. It is used to evaluate the muscle
fatigue with simple movements, performing
eccentric and concentric muscle actions of the
plantar flexor muscles with consecutive elevations
maximum heel (Sman et al., 2014, Yocum et al.,
2010). This research was done in collaboration
between the Assisted Living Computing and
Telecommunications Laboratory (ALLab), at
Institute of Telecommunications, at the University of
Beira Interior (UBI), in Covilhã, and Escola
Superior de Saúde Dr. Lopes Dias (ESALD), at the
Polytechnic Institute of Castelo Branco.
The experiments of this study were done in
several phases. These were: a) the initial phase to
identify and validate the accelerometry signal related
to the heel-rise movement, and b) a second phase to
validate the mobile application.
In the beginning many hypotheses were studied
about the measurement of the heel-rise test using
sensors. For initial measurements and to verify the
reliability of the accelerometer signal to measure the
results of the heel-rise test, the participants were
tested with a external tri-axial accelerometer,
attached to the participant’s waist, and a pressure
sensor attached to the heel, connected to a bioPlux
device (PLUX, 2010), that sends, over Bluetooth,
the collected data to a computer device. These
sensors were used at the same time that the
accelerometer signal was captured with the
smartphone, attached to the waist. This allowed to
compare the values obtained by external sensors and
the accelerometer sensor embedded in a smartphone.
Data that was collected by external sensors has a
frequency of 1kHz. With these experiments, it was
verified that when the value of the magnitude vector
is higher than Earth’s gravity it corresponds to the
time interval that the heel is not on the ground, i.e.
time of heel-rise repetition, as showed in figure 5.
Figure 5: Data collected by a pressure sensor and a tri-
axial accelerometer related to a heel-rise repetition.
In continuation, the participants did a few
experiences to try to identify the pattern of the
accelerometry data related to an exercise of the
Heel-Rise Test. The manual measurement of the
experiments for this study was performed using a
metronome. The participants did the exercises with a
PhyCS2015-DoctoralConsortium
14
mobile device placed on the waist to collect the
accelerometry data. The frequency of the collection
of the accelerometer data by the mobile application
was not possible to manage, but the application
collects the data as fast as possible, approximately
every 10 milliseconds. The accelerometry data was
compared between the experiments to identify a
pattern of a heel-rise repetition, which is showed in
figure 6.
Figure 6: Smartphone Accelerometer Data related to a
heel-rise repetition.
In the mobile device, an application previously
developed by the author of this document, named as
iAccelerometer Capture (Google, 2014a, Apple,
2014a), was used for collecting the accelerometer
data and save it to text files.
Then, the automatic algorithm was designed and
implemented as a mobile application.
In the last phase, this mobile application, named
as iFatigue Detector (Apple, 2014b, Google, 2014b),
was tested in a real environment with the same
participants of the start phase. During these tests,
some issues appeared related to the measurement of
the Heel-Rise Test. These were:
Sometimes the repetition is considered valid
by the examiner, but with the accelerometer
signal it is invalidated. This was because
there was a movement to the front instead of
a correct heel-rise exercise with vertical
movement;
Sometimes the person continues in movement
after performing the repetition and the mobile
application invalidates the exercise; and
Sometimes, during the movement, the person
has some vibrations and invalidates the
accelerometry signal.
In the mobile application, the collected data is
processed and validated after each two seconds and
before the next acoustic signal, applying the
validation rules. The time of two seconds between
heel-rise has a variation of some milliseconds that
corresponds to the delay of the data processing and
this is evaluated to accept or reject the exercise and
continue or stop the test. Thus, sometimes the
algorithm, implemented in the mobile application,
stops the test before the examiner, detecting the
irregular data in the accelerometry sensor. On the
other hand, the mobile application shows to be more
reliable than the measurement of the examiner,
because it detects some variations not visible to the
examiner.
During the experiments, another problem found
was where to locate the mobile device at it can
vibrate or move during the exercise. It must be
attached in a fixed position related to the user’s
body, preferably on people’s waist.
In general, the application implements the
algorithm that has been proved correct, but the
mobile application needs a more extensive
validation with different people, increasing the range
of ages, heights, physical conditions, lifestyle and
health problems. As a futures work, the validation of
the mobile application will be done in order to prove
the acceptance of the mobile application by the
medical communities.
5 CONCLUSIONS
In recent years, the use of mobile equipment has
increased. These equipments have embedded many
sensors, such as accelerometer, gyroscope and
proximity sensors, built-in GPS receiver, camera and
others, including possibility to connect to other
sensors via Bluetooth. The two most used platforms
in mobile devices, such as smartphones, tablets,
among others, are Android operating system (owned
by Google) and iOS operating system (owned by
Apple),.
The Heel-Rise Test consists in an easy,
inexpensive and non-invasive test, used to evaluate
the muscle fatigue with simple movements,
performing eccentric and concentric muscle actions
of the plantar flexor muscles with consecutive
maximum heel elevations. This test is able to detect
some health dysfunctions, but needs preparation of
the place and the examiner needs extra attention in
order to validate test performance, making use of a
metronome to measure the time intervals between
heel-rise repetitions.
However, the heel-rise test can be measured
using accelerometry and electromyography sensors
embedded in a mobile device, which in most of
cases are more reliable than the conventional
method. During the test, the mobile device should be
in a static position related to the body. During this
work, a mobile application was created to measure
the heel-rise test, which identifies a performance
MeasurementofHeel-RiseTestResultsusingaMobileDevice
15
pattern and implements the validation rules related
to the accelerometer data and the conventional rules.
For the creation and tests of the mobile application,
collaboration between ESALD and ALLab was
established, which allowed improving the relation
between the experts in the health and the computer
science areas.
The mobile application created in this research
work is multiplatform. The pre-version created
during this work is available for iOS operation
system (Apple, 2014b) and Android operating
system (Google, 2014b). This is a pre-version
because this mobile application needs an exhaustive
validation in order to be accepted by the medical
communities.
Besides, other tests employed in the
physiotherapy area can also make use of
accelerometry data and other embedded sensors, in
order to identify some other health problems.
In conclusion, these tests may have more accuracy
than the human eyes to examine the exercises, being
the technology very useful to offer support in this
type of measurements.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
This work was supported by FCT projectPEst-
OE/EEI/L A0008/2013 (Este trabalho foi suportado
pelo projecto FCT PEst-OE/EEI/LA0008/2013).
The authors would also like to acknowledge the
contribution of the COST Action IC1303
AAPELE – Architectures, Algorithms and Protocols
for Enhanced Living Environments.
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