Given the data they collected with video and markers, it does seem a little odd that they wouldn't have simply
measured angular velocity (or even ball velocity!)
Not exact matches
Although Malinzak et al. [33] based their conclusions on a smaller sample of 11 primate species, their analysis is the only comparative study to date that directly
measured angular head
velocities produced during locomotion.
It can be simply
measured using dynamometry by taking multiple measurements in the same dynamometer of the same joint angle movement, at different
angular velocities.
Angular velocity is simply the rotational speed of of an object on its axis and is
measured by rotational distance over time, such as radians or degrees per second.
I am well versed in transducer technology to
measure strain, deflection, force, pressure, temperature, acceleration,
velocity, and
angular rates.