Athlete Equilibrium Protocol

Falcon Pursuit’s Athlete Equilibrium Protocol (AEP) System revolutionizes medical equilibrium assessments, fusing advanced sensor technology with precision anthropometric engineering. In just 35 seconds, AEP captures real-time biomechanical data, creating robust baselines for balance and stability while progressing toward a quantitative gold standard. By tracking metrics like stability and adaptive movement resilience, AEP’s Baseline Momentum Protocol (BMP) turns diagnostics into a powerful roadmap for advancement, empowering coaches, medical teams, and athletes to break new ground.
Transform your performance with Falcon Pursuit AEP: Where Precision Ignites Excellence.

 

Balance measured beyond force plates

AEP Uses

System Features

  • 9-Axis IMU: Chest-belly accelerometer captures X-Y-Z accelerations, roll-pitch-yaw measurements, and inertial locators

  • Precision Ground Mapping: 3,600 ground plane pressure sensors detect foot or cleat metrics with center of pressure crosshair and projection of center of gravity to determine subtle weight shifts and center of pressure for upper body movements

  • Visual Reference System: LASER center line provides visual reference for athlete alignment

  • Human Tracker: Records 3D skeletal movements for all body segments from torso to extremities

  • Laboratory-Grade Diagnostics: Providing at-once, objective, data-driven insights into subtle balance disruptions, particularly important in compromised equilibrium protocols, where every moment counts

  • Rugged, Portable, & Easy to Set Up: Entire system is completely contained in a 76 lb. Pelican roller case for secure transport between facilities. Deployable and operational in under three minutes and provides up to six hours of continuous use from its internal rechargeable power supply

AEP Data Benefits

  • Measurements in 35 seconds
  • Baseline, in-season and post impact data
  • Live feedback
  • Side-by-side baseline & post-baseline scan playbacks
  • Pose options based on medical teams’ preferences