Evaluation of the Biomechanical Performance of Youth Football Helmets

Youth and varsity football helmets are currently designed similarly and tested to the same impact standards from the National Operating Committee on Standards for Athletic Equipment (NOCSAE). Youth players have differences in anthropometry, physiology, impact exposure, and potentially injury toleran...

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Main Author: Sproule, David William
Other Authors: Biomedical Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/77703
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-777032020-09-29T05:40:16Z Evaluation of the Biomechanical Performance of Youth Football Helmets Sproule, David William Biomedical Engineering Rowson, Steven Duma, Stefan M. Brolinson, P. Gunnar Youth Football Helmet Standards Testing Impact Performance Youth and varsity football helmets are currently designed similarly and tested to the same impact standards from the National Operating Committee on Standards for Athletic Equipment (NOCSAE). Youth players have differences in anthropometry, physiology, impact exposure, and potentially injury tolerance that should be considered in future youth-specific helmets and standards. This thesis begins by investigating the current standards and relating them to on-field data. The standard drop tests represented the most severe on-field impacts, and the performance of the youth and varsity helmet did not differ. There likely is not a need for a youth-specific standard as the current standard has essentially eliminated the catastrophic head injuries it tests for. As more is known about concussion, standards specific to the youth population can be developed. The second portion of this thesis compares the impact performance between 8 matched youth and varsity helmet models, using linear acceleration, rotational acceleration, and concussion correlate. It was found that helmet performance did not differ between the youth and varsity helmets, likely attributed to testing to the same standard. The final portion of this feature is aimed at advancing STAR for youth and varsity football helmets by including linear and rotational head kinematics. For varsity helmets, an adult surrogate is used for impact tests which are weighted based on on-field data collected from collegiate football players. For youth helmets, a youth surrogate is used and tests are weighted based on data collected from youth players. Master of Science 2017-05-24T08:00:18Z 2017-05-24T08:00:18Z 2017-05-23 Thesis vt_gsexam:9969 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/77703 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Youth Football
Helmet
Standards Testing
Impact Performance
spellingShingle Youth Football
Helmet
Standards Testing
Impact Performance
Sproule, David William
Evaluation of the Biomechanical Performance of Youth Football Helmets
description Youth and varsity football helmets are currently designed similarly and tested to the same impact standards from the National Operating Committee on Standards for Athletic Equipment (NOCSAE). Youth players have differences in anthropometry, physiology, impact exposure, and potentially injury tolerance that should be considered in future youth-specific helmets and standards. This thesis begins by investigating the current standards and relating them to on-field data. The standard drop tests represented the most severe on-field impacts, and the performance of the youth and varsity helmet did not differ. There likely is not a need for a youth-specific standard as the current standard has essentially eliminated the catastrophic head injuries it tests for. As more is known about concussion, standards specific to the youth population can be developed. The second portion of this thesis compares the impact performance between 8 matched youth and varsity helmet models, using linear acceleration, rotational acceleration, and concussion correlate. It was found that helmet performance did not differ between the youth and varsity helmets, likely attributed to testing to the same standard. The final portion of this feature is aimed at advancing STAR for youth and varsity football helmets by including linear and rotational head kinematics. For varsity helmets, an adult surrogate is used for impact tests which are weighted based on on-field data collected from collegiate football players. For youth helmets, a youth surrogate is used and tests are weighted based on data collected from youth players. === Master of Science
author2 Biomedical Engineering
author_facet Biomedical Engineering
Sproule, David William
author Sproule, David William
author_sort Sproule, David William
title Evaluation of the Biomechanical Performance of Youth Football Helmets
title_short Evaluation of the Biomechanical Performance of Youth Football Helmets
title_full Evaluation of the Biomechanical Performance of Youth Football Helmets
title_fullStr Evaluation of the Biomechanical Performance of Youth Football Helmets
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of the Biomechanical Performance of Youth Football Helmets
title_sort evaluation of the biomechanical performance of youth football helmets
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/77703
work_keys_str_mv AT sprouledavidwilliam evaluationofthebiomechanicalperformanceofyouthfootballhelmets
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