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A rocker sole shoe or rocker bottom shoe is a shoe which has a thicker-than-normal sole with rounded heel. Such shoes ensure the wearer does not have flat footing along the proximal-distal axis of the foot. The shoes are generically known by a variety of names including round bottom shoes,〔Tyrell & Carter (2008) page 134.〕 round/ed sole shoes, and toning shoes, but also by various brand names. Tyrell & Carter identified at least six standard variations of the rocker sole shoe and named them: ''toe-only rocker'', ''rocker bar'', ''mild rocker'', ''heel-to-toe rocker'', ''negative heel rocker'' and ''double rocker''.〔 Rocker soles may replace regular soles on any style of footwear. Some rocker bottom shoes are purpose built to reduce the function or replace the lost function of a joint. For example, a person with a hallux rigidus (stiff big toe) may use a rocker bottom shoe to replace the flexion lost at the metatarsal joint. Rocker bottom shoes are also used to compensate for the lost range of motion, however caused, at the tibiotalar joint (ankle joint). In such cases, the wearer maintains solid and stable footing while standing, but the rock of the heel assists with the propulsive phase of gait, making walking more natural and less painful to the affected joints. Beneficiaries of this type of sole modification include people suffering from arthritis or any other disorder or injury causing pain and/or loss of motion in foot joints. The construction of most varieties of rocker sole shoes mean that the wearer's body weight is shifted behind the ankle and the wearer is required to do more work than would be required in flat-soled shoe to find their center of gravity and remain balanced.〔 In the 00s, a heel-to-toe rocker sole shoe for the sports footwear market was popularized by brands such as ''MBT'', ''Shape Ups'' and ''EasyTone''. ==History== Rocker sole shoes have been referenced in publications as early as 1990. Branded generic rocker sole shoes were popularized for the mass market in the late 1990s and 00s by the Swiss Masai company as ''Masai Barefoot Technology'' or ''MBT''. According to Swiss Masai, the market concept originated with engineer and former athlete Karl Müller who intended they would "simulate the challenge of walking barefoot on soft earth".〔〔 Various other sports footwear companies followed suit with their own branded versions of the heel-to-toe rocker targeted at the exercise equipment market.〔 A news report estimated that 200,000 pairs of modern heel-to-toe rocker sole shoes were sold in the US in 2005.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Rocker bottom shoe」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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