Jereme Outerleys
Harvard University
27 Papers
12 Citations
Jereme Outerleys is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Ground reaction force. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 12 publications. Previous affiliations of Jereme Outerleys include Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital.
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Papers
Impact-Related Ground Reaction Forces Are More Strongly Associated With Some Running Injuries Than Others
TL;DR: Impact variables (VALR, VILR, and VSIL) were significantly higher when assessing the injured group as a whole, highlighting the importance of taking an injury-specific approach to biomechanical risk factors for running injury.
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A comparison of attachment methods of skin mounted inertial measurement units on tibial accelerations
TL;DR: Evaluated by systematically lower vertical accelerations, a more secure attachment method may be necessary for capturing the most representative measure of tibial accelerations during running, but a less secure method is sufficient for capturing tibIAL accelerations as a surrogate for impact loading forces.
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Reliability of wearable sensors to assess impact metrics during sport-specific tasks.
Julie P. Burland,Julie P. Burland,Jereme Outerleys,Christian Lattermann,Christian Lattermann,Irene S. Davis +5 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that wearable sensors can reliably measure the cumulative impact load during outdoor functional movements; however, kicking manoeuvres are less reliable.
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Multifactorial Determinants of Running Injury Locations in 550 Injured Recreational Runners.
TL;DR: Sex, foot strike pattern, and vGRF were the only factors that distinguished specific injury locations from the remaining injury locations, and women's sex was associated with injuries to the lower leg.
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Clothing condition does not affect meaningful clinical interpretation in markerless motion capture.
TL;DR: The results indicate that clothing, a potential limiting factor in markerless motion capture performance, would negligibly alter meaningful clinical interpretations under the conditions investigated.
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