Development of three-dimensional shoulder kinematic and electromyographic exposure variation analysis methodology in violin musicians

Jonathan F. Reynolds, Robert E. Leduc, Emily K. Kahnert, Paula M. Ludewig

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

A total of 11 male and 19 female violinists performed 30-second random-ordered slow and fast musical repertoire while right shoulder three-dimensional kinematic, and upper trapezius and serratus anterior surface electromyography (EMG) data were summarised using exposure variation analysis (EVA), a bivariate distribution of work time spent at categories of signal amplitude, and duration spent at a fixed category of amplitude. Sixty-two per cent of intraclass correlation coefficients [1,1] for all kinematic and EMG variables exceeded 0.75, and 40% of standard error of the measurement results were below 5%, confirming EVA reliability. When fast repertoire was played, increases in odds ratios in short duration cells were seen in 23 of 24 possible instances, and decreases in longer duration cells were seen in 17 instances in all EVA arrays using multinomial logistic regression with random effects, confirming a shift towards shorter duration. A reliable technique to assess right shoulder kinematic and EMG exposure in violinists was identified. Practitioner Summary: A reliable method of measuring right shoulder motion and muscle activity exposure variation in violinists was developed which can be used to assess ergonomic risk in other occupations. Recently developed statistical methods enabled differentiation between fast and slow musical performance of standardised musical repertoire.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1021-1039
Number of pages19
JournalErgonomics
Volume57
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2014

Keywords

  • electromyography
  • exposure variation analysis
  • reliability
  • shoulder
  • three-dimensional kinematics
  • violinist

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