A High-Frequency Wearable IMU-Based System for Countermovement Jump Assessment
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Pousibet Garrido, Antonio; Benavente Bardera, Cristina; Moreno Pérez, Juan A.; Pérez Regalado, Sergio; Carvajal Rodríguez, Miguel Ángel; Chirosa Ríos, Ignacio Jesús; Escobedo Araque, PabloEditorial
MDPI
Materia
countermovement jump Inertial measurement unit Wireless accelerometer wearable sensors
Fecha
2026-02-24Referencia bibliográfica
Pousibet-Garrido, A., Benavente, C., Moreno-Pérez, J. A., Pérez-Regalado, S., Carvajal, M. A., Chirosa, I. J., & Escobedo, P. (2026). A High-Frequency Wearable IMU-Based System for Countermovement Jump Assessment. Sensors, 26(5), 1408. https://doi.org/10.3390/s26051408
Patrocinador
Consejo Superior de Deportes (Ministerio de Cultura y Deporte) - (projects “SensorSportLab IV” and “SensorSportLab V” )Resumen
The countermovement jump (CMJ) is widely used to monitor neuromuscular performance in sport, but its assessment is largely dependent on force platforms, which limits their use outside the laboratory due to their cost and limited portability. This work describes the development and validation of a fully custom wearable inertial measurement unit (IMU) system for CMJ assessment. The platform is based on a single IMU placed on the lower back and sampled at 1 kHz, and includes Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) communication together with dedicated PC and smartphone applications. A new algorithm based on the derivative of vertical acceleration was implemented to identify take-off and landing instants. The system was evaluated using 119 CMJ trials performed by 19 participants and validated against a force platform used as the criterion reference. Different acceleration thresholds were tested, with 0.2 g providing the best compromise between detection robustness and the statistical quality of the measurements, yielding a detection rate of 97.43%. Agreement analysis showed a small systematic underestimation of flight time (bias = −0.0117 s), with moderate limits of agreement across the observed range. These results indicate that the proposed system may be suitable for practical, field-based CMJ monitoring, although the observed variability relative to force-platform measurements should be considered, particularly in applications requiring individual-level decision making.





