Spinal Movement Biomechanics

Diseases of the spine are common and the causes are often not fully understood. Our research contributes to a better understanding of spinal disorders. We evaluate existing and new treatment approaches and can thus derive recommendations for physiotherapy practice.

Diseases of the spine are common, and the causes are often not fully understood. Our research helps us better understand spinal diseases. We assess existing and new treatment approaches and derive recommendations for the physiotherapeutic practice. 

We use the Bern Movement Lab infrastructure for our research.

Other employes

Come join our team

For master's theses

Please contact Professor Stefan Schmid to learn about current opportunities for participation in the framework of a master’s thesis.

For PhD theses

We currently do not have any open doctoral positions.

Projects

Current projects

Completed projects

  • Quantifying full-body lifting strategies using a newly developed lifting index derived from regular video recordings: A comparative evaluation and reliability analysis.
    PI: Stefan Schmid, PT, PhD
    Sponsor: Unfunded
  • Computational modeling of the spine in patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. PI’s: Stefan Schmid, PT, PhD and Philippe Büchler, PhD    
    Sponsor: Unfunded
  • Measuring 3D lumbar spine motion during functional activities using textile sensors: A comparative evaluation and reliability analysis.
    PI: Stefan Schmid, PT, PhD
    Sponsor: Unfunded
  • Neuromechanical Analysis of selected Corrective Exercise Therapy Approaches in Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis (ExercAIS).
    PI: Stefan Schmid, PT, PhD
    Sponsor: Unfunded
  • Patient-specific Musculoskeletal Spine Modeling: Implementing Medical Imaging-based Muscle Morphology using an Automated Deep Learning Approach.
    PI: Stefan Schmid, PT, PhD
    Sponsor: BFH CfP (Grant-no.: 2157PT_G)
  • Lumbar vertebral loading and paraspinal muscle activity during object lifting in healthy pain-free adults: an exploratory cross-sectional pilot study.
    PI: Stefan Schmid, PT, PhD
    Sponsor: Unfunded
  • Low back pain: Unveiling the contribution of motor control adaption using biomechanical modeling and neuroimaging. Link
    PI: Michael L. Meier, PhD (Balgrist University Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland)
    Involved member(s) of Spinal Movement Biomechanics Group: Stefan Schmid, PT, PhD (Project partner)
    Sponsor: Swiss National Science Foundation (Grant-no.: 185123) 
  • Spine Biomechanics during Functional Activities in Patients with Chronic Low Back Pain: A Pilot Feasibility Study.
    PI: Stefan Schmid, PT, PhD
    Sponsor: Swiss Physiotherapy Association (physioswiss)
  • Novel musculoskeletal models to assess spine segmental loads in adolescents with idiopathic scoliosis.
    PI: Dennis E. Anderson, PhD (Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center & Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA)
    Involved member(s) of Spinal Movement Biomechanics Group: Stefan Schmid, PT, PhD (Co-investigator)
    Sponsor: National Center of Simulation and Rehabilitation Research (Sub-award of NIH grant no.: 5P2CHD065690
  • Using subject-specific musculoskeletal spine models to predict segmental loading and individual muscle forces during functional activities in adolescents with idiopathic scoliosis.
    PI: Stefan Schmid, PT, PhD
    Sponsor: Swiss National Science Foundation (Grant-no.: 178427)
  • The Measurement of Spine Dynamics during Gait for the Quantification of Intervention Outcomes in Patients with different Pathologies.
    PI: Stefan Schmid, PT, PhD
    Sponsor: Swiss Physiotherapy Association (physioswiss)

 

Partnerships

In the media

The media repeatedly pick up on our research work and refer to it. You can see a selection of articles here:

Software and databases

  • Personalizable full-body models with a detailed thoracolumbar spine (freely available OpenSim models and MATLAB code for download on SimTK)
  • Full-body models with detailed thoracolumbar spine for children and adolescents (freely available for download on the project hosting platform SimTK)
  • Spinal kinematics during gait in healthy individuals across different age groups (C3D-files freely available for download)

Publications