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help with forearm moment of inertia

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  • help with forearm moment of inertia

    I'm sorry to post this here, but I was unable to find any references in Medline.

    Does anyone have a reference for an article in which the the moment of inertia for
    the forearm is given for pronation/supination movements?

    Also, I was wondering how the values were scaled to subjects. For moments of
    inertia in other planes the scaling can be done by a formula like

    I=I(reported)*(h(subject)/h(reported))^2*(m(subject)/m(reported))

    where I(reported), h(reported), and m(reported) are the moment of inertia, height,
    and mass reported in the literature and I, h, and m are the moment of inertia,
    height, and mass of the subject. For pronation and supination, and other
    movements about a longitudinal axis, it seems like the scaling factor should be
    related to the radius of the segment, which should be proportional to something
    like m/h. Any thoughts?

    Thanks in advance,
    Phil Fink
    Center for Complex Systems
    Florida Atlantic University
    fink@walt.ccs.fau.edu
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