Three-dimensional rocking chair with variable curvature base for abdominal exercise
11097150 ยท 2021-08-24
Inventors
Cpc classification
A63B71/0054
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B22/16
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B21/0004
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B21/4039
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
A47C3/029
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B21/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
Abstract
An omnidirectional rocking chair for abdominal exercise has a rectangular support base with a convex lower support surface with variable radii of curvature. The chair back supports only the user's lower back. Rocking the chair develops outward momentum in the mass of the user's upper back, arms and head. The minimum lower support surface radius of curvature is in its central portion and the center of that curvature is above the center of gravity of the seated user and chair. The peripheral portions of the lower support surface have larger radii of curvature. The corner portions of the lower support surface have maximum radii of curvature. The effect of progressive increase in support surface radius of curvature is to increase righting moment in the rocking motion where the respective larger radii portions contact the floor. This acts to decelerate outward rocking motion in the chair seat and user's lower back in opposition to the developed outward momentum in the mass of the user's upper back, arms, and head, which engages user abdominal trunk muscles.
Claims
1. An exercise chair comprising: a seat with a front end towards which a seated user faces, an opposite aft end, a left side, and a right side, and a base that is rectangular, wherein the base has a convex complexly curved lower surface that gravitationally bears upon a floor surface in use, wherein the center of gravity of the chair and the seated user is above a central portion of the lower base surface, wherein the central portion of the lower base surface has a first radius of curvature with a center of curvature that is above the center of gravity of the chair and seated user, wherein portions of the lower base surface surrounding the central portion have radii of curvature greater than said first radius of curvature, wherein portions of the lower base surface where lower base surface ends and lower base surface sides meet have the maximum radii of curvature, wherein a form of said lower base surface is such that its adjacent portions with differential radii of curvature are mutually tangent, and wherein a set of intersections between the lower body of the chair base and a set of horizontal planes form a set of contour lines where: one or more lower contour lines are transversely elongated elliptical shapes, one or more intermediate contour lines are quasi rectangular shapes with rounded corners and straighter longitudinal and transverse sections, and one or more upper contour lines are forward and aft segments that intersect the chair base sides and are straighter and more parallel to the chair ends than the intermediate contour lines.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9) In the preferred embodiment radius A is less than radius J and angle S is greater than angle T.
(10)
(11) In the preferred embodiment, the lowest portion of body support surface 40 is nine inches above floor 5, and the above measures of the complex curvature of base surface 15 are as follows: Angle S equals twelve degrees, radius A equals twenty-one inches, radii C and B equal thirty inches, radius D equals 53 inches, radii E and F equal fifty-five inches, angle T equals 6 degrees, radius J equals 25 inches, and radii K and L equal 35 inches.
(12) In the preferred mode of operation, a user sits upon support surface 40 and extends her or his legs to hold her or his heels above floor 5. In that stationary position, upper base surface 14 is substantially horizontal and the point of tangent contact between lower base surface 15 and floor 5 is within the area of base surface 15 bounded longitudinally between rays X1 and X2 and transversely between rays Y1 and Y2, as shown in
(13) A user then acts to shift her or his center of gravity horizontally. This action may result from one or a combination of the following motions: Tipping the head forward, aftward or sideward, extending one or both arms forward, aftward or sideward, retracting the legs, swinging one or both legs sideward, flexing the abdominal muscles to pull the upper body forward, grasping hand grips 32 and 34 and exerting a same direction horizontal or vertical force to which the upper body reacts by tipping forward, aftward or sideward, and grasping hand grips 32 and 34 and exerting respective opposing horizontal or vertical forces, which develops a force couple to which the upper body reacts by tipping forward, aftward or sideward. Because the radius of curvature of lower base surface 15 is smallest within its central portion bound by rays X1, X2, Y1, and Y2, the above shift in user center of gravity easily initiates a chair rocking motion of lower base surface 15 upon floor 5 away from the above initial stationary position. This chair rolling motion then develops forward, aftward, or sideward horizontal momentum in the user's upper body mass above the top of seat back 44.
(14) Next, the above chair rolling motion shifts the point of tangent contact between base surface 15 and floor 5 to a peripheral portion where the radius of curvature of base surface 15 is greater than within the central portion bound by rays X1, X2, Y1, and Y2. This larger peripheral radius of curvature increases the gravitational righting moment on the chair, which is a restoring force that acts to arrest the above forward, aftward, or sideward rolling motion. This increased restoring force translates from the chair to the user's lower body through the body's sitting connection to support surface 40. At this moment, one or more of the user's abdominal core muscles then contract to translate this increased restoring force from the user's lower body to the user's upper body. This abdominal core muscle engagement is greater than it would be if the curvature of lower base 15 were constant. In this way, a first benefit of the chair's variable curvature base is increased abdominal muscle engagement in upper body mass deceleration.
(15) Human muscles react dynamically as springs. In the above initial chair roll, after the forward, aftward or sideward upper body momentum has been opposed, the same muscle contraction causes a small angle deflection of the user's abdomen in the opposite direction, which then shifts the user's center of gravity to initiate the next roll in the opposite direction. In this way, a second benefit of the chair's variable curvature base is to help establish a rhythmical cycle of to and fro rolling, which is inherently enjoyable.
(16) A third benefit of the chair's variable curvature base is the consequent restriction of the amplitude of the above to and fro rolling cycle, which enhances actual and perceived user security in the chair.
(17) The above listed multiple means by which a user may shift her or his center of gravity, combined with the freedom to roll the chair in any direction, provide a diverse set of potential exercise routines.
(18) A particular exercise that benefits from the chair's variable curvature base results in a quasi-rectangular motion about the chair's vertical axis. Here there is a particular benefit in lateral trunk muscle engagement due to the reduction in lower base 15 curvature adjacent to forward end 10 and aft end 11, near where chines 54 and 56 are straight. In this mode of operation, the user initially tips the chair to a first side, and then initiates a rocking motion along that side. The transverse radius of curvature along the sides is less at the ends of the base than in its midsection, as radii K and L transition to straight chines 54 and 56. Therefore, when rocking along one side, as the user's forward or aftward motion stops, the radius of curvature of lower base 15 at its point of contact with floor 5 is less in the transverse direction than in the forward-aft direction. This results in an abrupt reverse tip to the opposite side, which engages the lateral core muscles to accelerate the user's upper body towards the opposite side. The return longitudinal rocking motion is then veers to that opposite side. Continuation of this exercise results in a quasi-rectangular motion. The user may alternate this cycle in clockwise and counter-clockwise directions with or without use of handles 32 and 34.
(19) The chair primarily engages abdominal core muscles to oppose horizontal momentum in the user's upper body that results from the chair's rolling motion. This has a significant advantage to persons with spinal injuries or back pain, because it does not require large angle spinal flexure and the user's vertebrae remain within their neutral zone of relative motion. The spine as a whole moves with the chair. This is in contrast to crunch type exercises in which the abdominal muscles act to bend the spine. A related advantage of this mode of core engagement is in fall prevention. Here the controlled rolling motion of the whole upper body in the chair is geometrically similar to sway in a person's upper body that may presage a fall. In using the chair, the neurological pathways that act to stabilize the spine are repeatedly used to resist the rolling induced upper body momentum. These are the same neurological pathways activated in balance keeping reflexes. In these ways, the chair both strengthens muscles needed to keep balance and trains the neurological reflexes that activate them.
(20) A further engagement of a user's abdominal core muscles is in the abdominal reaction to arm extension and contraction when pulling or pushing on hand grips 32 and 34.