Abstract
Sensor technology that is unobtrusively integrated into the clothing and equipment of an athlete can support the training of sport activities and monitor the athlete;s progress. In this paper, we propose two wearable systems that support ice hockey players in the training of skating and shooting. These assistants measure the motions of players and compare them with reference executions of the same activities by professional players. A third system that we introduce monitors the player;s activities during a hockey game and creates a match report for objective performance measurement. For each of the three proposed applications, we present a prototype setup that we evaluate with amateur and professional players. The main findings are i) that with a skate-worn motion sensor and user-dependent training, eight skating motions can be spotted with an accuracy above 90%, ii) that stick-integrated sensors enable the measurement of relevant shot features, which differentiate professional from amateur athletes, and iii) that it is possible to spot important ice hockey activities in the signals of body-worn motion sensors worn during a game.
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