Error analysis of a direct current electromagnetic tracking system in digitizing 3-dimensional surface geometries

Andrew D. Milne, J. Michael Lee

Résultat de recherche: Conference articleexamen par les pairs

10 Citations (Scopus)

Résumé

The direct current electromagnetic tracking device has seen increasing use in biomechanics studies of joint kinematics and anatomical surface geometry. In these applications, a stylus is attached to a sensor to measure the spatial location of three-dimensional landmarks. Stylus calibration is performed by rotating the stylus about a fixed point in space and using regression analysis to determine the tip offset vector. Measurement errors can be induced via several pathways, including; intrinsic system errors in sensor position or angle and tip offset calibration errors. A detailed study was performed to determine the errors introduced in digitizing small surfaces with different stylus lengths (35, 55, and 65 mm) and approach angles (30 and 45 degrees) using a plastic calibration board and hemispherical models. Two-point discrimination errors increased to an average of 1.93 mm for a 254 mm step size. Rotation about a single point produced mean errors of 0.44 to 1.18 mm. Statistically significant differences in error were observed with increasing approach angles (p < 0.001). Errors of less than 6% were observed in determining the curvature of a 19 mm hemisphere. This study demonstrates that the 'Flock of Birds' can be used as a digitizing tool with accuracy better than 0.76% over 254 mm step sizes.

Langue d'origineEnglish
Pages (de-à)23-28
Nombre de pages6
JournalBiomedical Sciences Instrumentation
Volume35
Statut de publicationPublished - 1999
ÉvénementProceedings of the 1999 36th Annual Rocky Mountain Bioengineering Symposium (RMBS) and 36th International ISA Biomedical Sciences Instrumentation Symposium - Copper Mountain, CO, USA
Durée: avr. 16 1998avr. 18 1998

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Biophysics
  • Medical Laboratory Technology

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