MIPS Project Detail:

Company
Company Description:
Under Armour® (NYSE: UA) is a leading developer, marketer and distributor of branded performance apparel, footwear and accessories. The company’s products are sold worldwide and worn by athletes at all levels, from youth to professionals, on playing fields around the globe. The Under Armour® global headquarters is in Baltimore, Md., with European headquarters in Amsterdam’s Olympic Stadium, and additional offices in Denver, Hong Kong, Toronto, and Guangzhou, China.

MIPS Project
Adaptation of running to a new shoe design
Project #
4706
|
MIPS Round
47
|
Starting Date:
Feb 2011
MIPS Project Challenge:
The company wanted to complete research on the science of running to help them create the best shoe for the sport.
MIPS Role:
Under Armour’s project focused on the biomechanical and physiological assessment of shoed running and comparing the differences between traditional running shoes and the company’s newly designed running shoes. Under Armour hypothesized that the company’s new shoes could reduce the potential for injury by minimizing biomechanical risk factors and reducing the metabolic demands of running. Thirty individuals with two different foot-striking patterns (rearfoot and forefoot) were recruited. Subjects were asked to run twice a week at self-selected paces for four weeks. They used traditional running shoes for the first two weeks and Under Armour’s new shoes for the last two weeks. Biomechanical measurements and analysis were performed at the end of each two-week cycle. The kinematic and kinetic measures, muscular activations and metabolic consumption rate were used to test the hypothesis. The outcomes of the study were then used by the manufacturers to make evidence-based decisions on shoe design.

Results:
Principal Investigator:
Jae Kun
Shim
Assistant Professor, Kinesiology
Project Manager:
Craig
Lindemann
Technologies:
Other