Inertial Motion Capture and Digital Human Modeling for Ergonomic Risk Assessment of Accordion Performance
Kratka vsebina
Reliable ergonomic risk assessment requires methods that capture short, asymmetric, and repetitive postures. We present a wearable, model-based workflow to evaluate posture risk during accordion playing. One experienced right-handed player performed a 10-minute standing piece wearing inertial sensors. Motion data were mapped to a scaled digital human model, the accordion mass was added at the shoulders, and postures were scored using ergonomic methods. Joint-angle exposure and L4/L5 compression, shear, and moments were also measured. The neck and trunk remained mostly near neutral, while the upper limbs showed sustained non-neutral loading, including deep right-elbow flexion and continuous wrist flexion and deviation. Peak L4/L5 compression was around 1750 N, with low shear. Results support strap adjustments, technique coaching, and practice planning to reduce upper-limb risk. This case study shows how IMU data and digital human modeling can provide fast, repeatable risk scoring for performance health.






