Link J, Schwinn L, Pulsmeyer F, Kautz T, Eskofier B (2022)
Publication Type: Journal article
Publication year: 2022
Book Volume: 22
Article Number: 8474
Journal Issue: 21
DOI: 10.3390/s22218474
With tracking systems becoming more widespread in sports research and regular training and competitions, more data are available for sports analytics and performance prediction. We analyzed 2523 ski jumps from 205 athletes on five venues. For every jump, the dataset includes the 3D trajectory, 3D velocity, skis’ orientation, and metadata such as wind, starting gate, and ski jumping hill data. Using this dataset, we aimed to predict the expected jump length (xLength) inspired by the expected goals metric in soccer (xG). We evaluate the performance of a fully connected neural network, a convolutional neural network (CNN), a long short-term memory (LSTM), and a ResNet architecture to estimate the xLength. For the prediction of the jump length one second after take-off, we achieve a mean absolute error (MAE) of 5.3 (Formula presented.) for the generalization to new athletes and an MAE of 5.9 (Formula presented.) for the generalization to new ski jumping hills using ResNet architectures. Additionally, we investigated the influence of the input time after the take-off on the predictions’ accuracy. As expected, the MAE becomes smaller with longer inputs. Due to the real-time transmission of the sensor’s data, xLength can be updated during the flight phase and used in live TV broadcasting. xLength could also be used as an analysis tool for experts to quantify the quality of the take-off and flight phases.
APA:
Link, J., Schwinn, L., Pulsmeyer, F., Kautz, T., & Eskofier, B. (2022). xLength: Predicting Expected Ski Jump Length Shortly after Take-Off Using Deep Learning. Sensors, 22(21). https://doi.org/10.3390/s22218474
MLA:
Link, Johannes, et al. "xLength: Predicting Expected Ski Jump Length Shortly after Take-Off Using Deep Learning." Sensors 22.21 (2022).
BibTeX: Download