TY - JOUR AU - Xi, Yu AU - Li, Zhongsheng AU - Vatatheeswaran, Surendran AU - Devecchi, Valter AU - Gallina, Alessio PY - 2025 DA - 2025/4/1 TI - Assessment of Pelvic Motion During Single-Leg Weight-Bearing Tasks Using Smartphone Sensors: Validity Study JO - JMIR Rehabil Assist Technol SP - e65342 VL - 12 KW - smartphone KW - kinematics KW - acceleration KW - exercise KW - squat AB - Background: Clinicians and athletic training specialists often assess the performance of single-leg, weight-bearing tasks to monitor rehabilitation progress and guide exercise progression. Some of the key metrics assessed are excessive pelvic motion, balance, and duration of each repetition of the exercise. Motion can be objectively characterized using motion capture (MOCAP); however, MOCAP is often not available in clinics due to the high costs and complexity of the analyses. Smartphones have built-in sensors that can be used to measure changes in body segment orientation and acceleration, which may make them a more feasible and affordable technology to use in practice. Objective: This study aimed to determine if, compared to gold-standard MOCAP, smartphone sensors can provide valid measures of pelvic orientation, acceleration, and repetition duration during single-leg tasks in healthy individuals. Methods: Overall, 52 healthy participants performed single-leg squats and step-down tasks from heights of 15 and 20 cm. Pelvic motion was assessed using MOCAP and a smartphone placed over the sacrum. The MATLAB (MathWorks) mobile app was used to collect smartphone acceleration and orientation data. Individual repetitions of each exercise were manually identified, and the following outcomes were extracted: duration of the repetition, mediolateral acceleration, and 3D pelvic orientation at peak squat. Validity was assessed by comparing metrics assessed with a smartphone and MOCAP using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) and paired Wilcoxon tests. Differences between tasks were compared using 1-way ANOVA or the Friedman test. Results: Across the 3 single-leg tasks, smartphone estimates demonstrated consistently high agreement with the MOCAP for all metrics (ICC point estimates: >0.8 for mediolateral acceleration and frontal plane orientation; >0.9 for squat duration and orientation on the sagittal and transverse plane). Bias was identified for most outcomes (multiple P<.001). Both smartphone and MOCAP recordings identified clear differences between tasks, with step-down tasks usually requiring larger changes in pelvic orientation and larger mediolateral sways. Duration did not differ between tasks. Conclusions: Despite a consistent bias, the smartphone demonstrated good to excellent validity relative to gold-standard MOCAP for most outcomes. This demonstrates that smartphones offer an accessible and affordable tool to objectively characterize pelvic motion during different single-leg weight-bearing tasks in healthy participants. Together with earlier reports of good between-day reliability of similar measures during single-leg squats, our results suggest that smartphone sensors can be used to assess and monitor single-leg task performance. Future studies should investigate whether smartphone sensors can aid in the assessment and treatment of people with musculoskeletal disorders. More user-friendly interfaces and data analysis procedures may also facilitate the implementation of this technology in practice. SN - 2369-2529 UR - https://rehab.jmir.org/2025/1/e65342 UR - https://doi.org/10.2196/65342 DO - 10.2196/65342 ID - info:doi/10.2196/65342 ER -