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The way a chair manages your weight is actually the key to the comfort you feel when you're sitting for hours. It directly correlates with how long you can remain productive without feeling physical fatigue. Sitting pressure distribution is the biomechanical measure that shows where force (your weight) will be distributed when you sit on the contact areas of a chair.
When you are sitting upright, your body weight is primarily distributed to your ischial tuberosities (the "sitting bones") and the adjacent soft tissue. In typical chair designs, this weight remains concentrated in small "hot spots." This pressure in those areas limits blood flow and compresses the tissues. Finding a chair that will keep you feeling comfortable long term means finding an effective pressure distribution chair that increases the total surface area of contact, spreading weight to reduce intensity at any single point.
Reclined sitting increases contact area between the body and chair, allowing pressure to distribute across the seat and backrest.
The body wasn't designed for long periods of sitting, and our hips and thighs weren't evolved to serve as seat cushions.
When sitting in a fixed position, your body weight tends to concentrate in areas called "hot spots," which typically occur in the pelvic and thigh regions. It is these hot spots of high peak pressure that are primarily responsible for both local discomfort and limited blood circulation.
A study in Applied Sciences identifies a "missing link" as the relationship between perceived seated comfort and pressure from a chair on the actual body. The researchers found that a comfortable pressure distribution of the body while sitting is when the perceived pressure distribution across the body is consistently distributed within a set range. To maintain comfort over long periods of time, a chair needs to be more than soft; it must balance the load of our bodies according to how our nervous system perceives pressure.
LiberNovo utilizes advanced testing to ensure these scientific principles translate to real-world comfort. You can see LiberNovo demonstrating the pressure mapping process here, which visualizes how the chair eliminates high-pressure zones in real time to create a uniform support surface.
The primary purpose of pressure relief seating is to ensure the long-term health of soft tissues. Studies show that greater contact area with dynamic contours is associated with lower peak pressure. With peak pressure reduced, the nervous system will send fewer "pain" signals to the brain, minimizing distractions while you work or game.
Contoured seat surfaces increase load-bearing area, reducing peak pressure under the thighs.
For a practical look at the data, see Engineering Comfort: The Data Behind LiberNovo’s Pressure Relief System.
The backrest is also key to evenly distributing our body weight while we're sitting. Unlike typical office chairs that leave gaps on the lumbar and thoracic regions of your back from the chair's backrest, the Bionic FlexFit Backrest of the LiberNovo Omni allows for the normal motion and curvature of the human rib cage while providing gapless contact, allowing the weight of a seated individual to be equally distributed regardless of how much they shift or lean in their chair.
The Bionic FlexFit Backrest maintains continuous contact as posture changes, helping distribute upper-body load evenly.
A primary function of the LiberNovo Omni's designs is to enable you to move freely while remaining supported. Most traditional chairs have fixed backs that do not adjust for the various ways you move your body when you're sitting. Because of these rigid backrest designs, the pressure spikes in areas of your back when you twist or lean. The LiberNovo Omni's Dynamic Support system responds to every postural adjustment made by the user, maintaining maximum contact surface area while you shift your weight. By supporting the entire spine and torso, the chair reduces pressure on the spinal discs and distributes it across a larger contact surface on the backrest.
A holistic approach to sitting pressure distribution needs to also include the neck and arms.
Footrest use shifts load away from the thighs and seat edge, supporting lower-body pressure redistribution.
Optimal sitting pressure distribution is the difference between ending your day feeling energized or feeling depleted. Investing in pressure-relief seating is a commitment to your long-term spinal health.