Dependency of running shoe preference on assessment method and cultural background

The Visual Analog Scale (VAS) has been widely used in footwear perception studies due to its sensitivity and unbiased results. However, in retail stores, heads-on comparison, which is wearing two different shoes at a time, would be a more commonly used method to select the preferred running shoes. T...

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Main Author: Lim, Chen Yen.
Other Authors: Li Ning Company Limited
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2013
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52157
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-521572020-09-27T20:19:47Z Dependency of running shoe preference on assessment method and cultural background Lim, Chen Yen. Li Ning Company Limited Kong Pui Wah DRNTU::Science The Visual Analog Scale (VAS) has been widely used in footwear perception studies due to its sensitivity and unbiased results. However, in retail stores, heads-on comparison, which is wearing two different shoes at a time, would be a more commonly used method to select the preferred running shoes. This study aims to examine the influence of assessment method and cultural background between Singapore and China on running footwear perception. A total of 100 participants, 50 from each country, tested 4 shoes for 2 assessment methods – VAS and heads-on comparison – on the treadmill. Each pair were assessed for 5 minutes based on fit, cushioning, arch support, stability and overall shoe preference for the VAS. For heads-on comparison, 6 different combinations were assessed for 1 minute each based on overall shoe preference. Moderate to good reliability were concluded for the VAS assessment, and fair to moderate reliability for the heads-on comparison. For the whole results, the numbers of matched shoe ranking between the assessment methods are low. A general trend was observed that Shoe B and D were preferred over Shoe A, and Shoe C was least preferred for both countries. A wider range was also used by the Singaporeans, but maximum and minimum values used for the VAS were lower than the Beijing Chinese. In conclusion, running footwear perception differs between assessment methods. Similar preferences were observed for subjects from both countries; running footwear perception does not differ between cultural backgrounds. Lastly, running footwear discrimination range differs between Beijing and Singapore. Bachelor of Science (Sport Science and Management) 2013-04-24T04:59:43Z 2013-04-24T04:59:43Z 2013 2013 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52157 en 58 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science
Lim, Chen Yen.
Dependency of running shoe preference on assessment method and cultural background
description The Visual Analog Scale (VAS) has been widely used in footwear perception studies due to its sensitivity and unbiased results. However, in retail stores, heads-on comparison, which is wearing two different shoes at a time, would be a more commonly used method to select the preferred running shoes. This study aims to examine the influence of assessment method and cultural background between Singapore and China on running footwear perception. A total of 100 participants, 50 from each country, tested 4 shoes for 2 assessment methods – VAS and heads-on comparison – on the treadmill. Each pair were assessed for 5 minutes based on fit, cushioning, arch support, stability and overall shoe preference for the VAS. For heads-on comparison, 6 different combinations were assessed for 1 minute each based on overall shoe preference. Moderate to good reliability were concluded for the VAS assessment, and fair to moderate reliability for the heads-on comparison. For the whole results, the numbers of matched shoe ranking between the assessment methods are low. A general trend was observed that Shoe B and D were preferred over Shoe A, and Shoe C was least preferred for both countries. A wider range was also used by the Singaporeans, but maximum and minimum values used for the VAS were lower than the Beijing Chinese. In conclusion, running footwear perception differs between assessment methods. Similar preferences were observed for subjects from both countries; running footwear perception does not differ between cultural backgrounds. Lastly, running footwear discrimination range differs between Beijing and Singapore.
author2 Li Ning Company Limited
author_facet Li Ning Company Limited
Lim, Chen Yen.
format Final Year Project
author Lim, Chen Yen.
author_sort Lim, Chen Yen.
title Dependency of running shoe preference on assessment method and cultural background
title_short Dependency of running shoe preference on assessment method and cultural background
title_full Dependency of running shoe preference on assessment method and cultural background
title_fullStr Dependency of running shoe preference on assessment method and cultural background
title_full_unstemmed Dependency of running shoe preference on assessment method and cultural background
title_sort dependency of running shoe preference on assessment method and cultural background
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/52157
_version_ 1681056386098659328