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  • Re: First historical use of the Center of Pressure in studyinggait and posture

    What a fascinating observation, Pierre!

    It's true that Herb Elftmann was the first to make a 6 degree of freedom
    force platform and describe calculation of the CoP.

    Elftman H (1934) A cinematic study of the distribution of pressure in the
    human foot. Anat. Rec. 59: 481-487.

    But before that, Marey measured it by a pneumatic method - I don't know for
    sure, but I suspect he must have measured CoP directly:

    http://www.univie.ac.at/cga/history/enlightenment.html

    Come to think of it,
    Braune and Fischer must have also used it - I think they just estimated it
    from film?

    Chris
    Dr. Chris Kirtley MB ChB, PhD
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    Clinical Gait Analysis: http://www.univie.ac.at/cga
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    On Mon, Nov 9, 2009 at 4:08 PM, Pierre-Brice Wieber <
    pierre-brice.wieber@inrialpes.fr> wrote:

    > Dear Biomech-l readers,
    >
    > by pure curiosity, I have been wondering a bit about the history of the use
    > of the Center of Pressure when studying human gait and posture. I'm not a
    > researcher in biomechanics but in robotics, so I'm not fluent in finding
    > proper references in this field. The concept of Center of Pressure seems to
    > appear first in ballistics, and I've found aerospace textbooks from the
    > 1940s mentioning it although I'm confident it's a far much older concept.
    >
    > My guess is that this concept hasn't been introduced in biomechanics until
    > there was a way to measure it, perhaps not before the advent of "modern"
    > force platforms in the 1950s. I couldn't find however references explicitly
    > mentioning the center of pressure at that time.
    >
    > The earliest I could find so far is:
    > AN INVESTIGATION OF THE CENTRES OF PRESSURE UNDER THE FOOT WHILE WALKING
    > By GRUNDY, BLACKBURN, TOSH, MCLEISH and SMIDT
    > In THE JOURNAL OF BONE AND JOINT SURGERY 1975
    >
    > But I'm sure this can't be the first use of the center of pressure.
    >
    > Could anybody point me at the definitive reference on this question?
    > Thanks a lot,
    > Pierre-Brice Wieber.
    >
    > ---------------------------------------------------------------
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