An open question for the biomechanical research community is accurate estimation of the volume and mass of each body segment of the human body, especially when indirect measurements are based on biomechanical modeling. Traditional methods involve the adoption of anthropometric tables, which describe only the average human shape, or manual measurements, which are time-consuming and depend on the operator. We propose a novel method based on the acquisition of a 3D scan of a subject’s body, which is obtained using a consumer-end RGB-D camera. The body segments’ separation is obtained by combining the body skeleton estimation of BlazePose with a biomechanical-coherent skeletal model, which is defined according to the literature. The volume of each body segment is computed using a 3D Monte Carlo procedure. Results were compared with manual measurement by experts, anthropometric tables, and a model leveraging truncated cone approximations, showing good adherence to reference data with minimal differences (ranging from +0.5 to −1.0 dm3 for the upper limbs, −0.1 to −4.2 dm3 for the thighs, and −0.4 to −2.3 dm3 for the shanks). In addition, we propose a novel indicator based on the computation of equivalent diameters for each body segment, highlighting the importance of gender-specific biomechanical models to account for the chest and pelvis areas of female subjects.

Measurement of Human Body Segment Properties Using Low-Cost RGB-D Cameras

Nuzzi, Cristina
Methodology
;
Ghidelli, Marco
Investigation
;
Lancini, Matteo
Validation
2025-01-01

Abstract

An open question for the biomechanical research community is accurate estimation of the volume and mass of each body segment of the human body, especially when indirect measurements are based on biomechanical modeling. Traditional methods involve the adoption of anthropometric tables, which describe only the average human shape, or manual measurements, which are time-consuming and depend on the operator. We propose a novel method based on the acquisition of a 3D scan of a subject’s body, which is obtained using a consumer-end RGB-D camera. The body segments’ separation is obtained by combining the body skeleton estimation of BlazePose with a biomechanical-coherent skeletal model, which is defined according to the literature. The volume of each body segment is computed using a 3D Monte Carlo procedure. Results were compared with manual measurement by experts, anthropometric tables, and a model leveraging truncated cone approximations, showing good adherence to reference data with minimal differences (ranging from +0.5 to −1.0 dm3 for the upper limbs, −0.1 to −4.2 dm3 for the thighs, and −0.4 to −2.3 dm3 for the shanks). In addition, we propose a novel indicator based on the computation of equivalent diameters for each body segment, highlighting the importance of gender-specific biomechanical models to account for the chest and pelvis areas of female subjects.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11379/623485
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