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3D anthropometric investigation of head and face characteristics of Australian cyclists

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-23, 06:13 authored by Thierry Perret-Ellena, Sebastian Skals, Aleks SubicAleks Subic, Helmy Mustafa El Bakri, Toh Yen PangToh Yen Pang
Design specialists have acknowledged the need for more accurate measurements of human anthropometry through the use of 3D data, especially for the design of head and facial equipment. However, 3D anthropometric surveys of the human head are sparse in the literature and practically non-existent for Australia. Research published to date has not proposed concrete methods that can accurately address the hair thickness responsible for inaccurate representation of the head's shape. This study used a state-of-theart handheld white light scanner to digitize 3D anthropometric data of 222 participants in the Melbourne Metropolitan Area. The participants volunteered for the study consisted of 46 females and 176 males (age: 34.6 ± 12.5). The participants' head scans were aligned to a standard axis system, whereby a Hair Thickness Offset (HTO) method was introduced to more accurately describe the true shape of the head. It is envisaged that the database constructed through this research can be used as a reference for the design and testing of helmets in Australia.

History

Start page

98

End page

103

Total pages

6

Outlet

Procedia Engineering - Proceedings of the 7th Asia-Pacific Congress on Sports Technology (APCST 2015: Volume 112)

Editors

A. Subic, F.K. Fuss, F. Alam, T.Y. Pang and M. Takla

Name of conference

APCST 2015: The Impact of Technology on Sport VI

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Place published

Netherlands

Start date

2015-09-23

End date

2015-09-25

Language

English

Copyright

©2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license

Former Identifier

2006054675

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-08-12

Open access

  • Yes

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