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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2018 Feb 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Appl Biomech. 2016 Oct 5;33(1):12–23. doi: 10.1123/jab.2015-0324

Table 4.

Median Orientation of Axes of Rotation*

Condition Flexion-Extension Axis Radial-Ulnar Deviation Axis
median 25th percentile 75th percentile median 25th percentile 75th percentile
Nonimpaired [0.979, 0.193, −0.067] [0.959, 0.046, −0.279] [0.936, 0.322, 0.146] [0.097, 0.580, 0.809] [−0.620, 0.266, 0.738] [0.382, 0.628, 0.678]
4CF [0.982, 0.187, 0.032] [0.961, 0.016, −0.277] [0.899, 0.323, 0.295] [−0.356, 0.522, 0.775] [−0.598, 0.448, 0.664] [−0.137, 0.549, 0.824]
SE4CF [0.995, 0.093, −0.037] [0.946, −0.237, −0.221] [0.916, 0.381, 0.127] [−0.499, 0.375, 0.781] [−0.672, 0.299, 0.704] [−0.334, 0.487, 0.807]
*

Orientation of axes of rotation reported as unit vectors [x, y, z] in the radius reference frame. Positive values represent the radial, proximal, and dorsal directions. The median, 25th percentile, and 75th percentile were calculated using spherical statistics (Fisher et al., 1987). An illustration of these axis orientations are provided in Figure 4 and Figure 5.