JOURNAL ARTICLE

Estimation of Physical Activity Energy Expenditure during Free-Living from Wrist Accelerometry in UK Adults

Tom WhiteKate WestgateNicholas J. WarehamSøren Brage

Year: 2016 Journal:   PLoS ONE Vol: 11 (12)Pages: e0167472-e0167472   Publisher: Public Library of Science

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Wrist-worn accelerometers are emerging as the most common instrument for measuring physical activity in large-scale epidemiological studies, though little is known about the relationship between wrist acceleration and physical activity energy expenditure (PAEE). METHODS: 1695 UK adults wore two devices simultaneously for six days; a combined sensor and a wrist accelerometer. The combined sensor measured heart rate and trunk acceleration, which was combined with a treadmill test to yield a signal of individually-calibrated PAEE. Multi-level regression models were used to characterise the relationship between the two time-series, and their estimations were evaluated in an independent holdout sample. Finally, the relationship between PAEE and BMI was described separately for each source of PAEE estimate (wrist acceleration models and combined-sensing). RESULTS: Wrist acceleration explained 44-47% between-individual variance in PAEE, with RMSE between 34-39 J•min-1•kg-1. Estimations agreed well with PAEE in cross-validation (mean bias [95% limits of agreement]: 0.07 [-70.6:70.7]) but overestimated in women by 3% and underestimated in men by 4%. Estimation error was inversely related to age (-2.3 J•min-1•kg-1 per 10y) and BMI (-0.3 J•min-1•kg-1 per kg/m2). Associations with BMI were similar for all PAEE estimates (approximately -0.08 kg/m2 per J•min-1•kg-1). CONCLUSIONS: A strong relationship exists between wrist acceleration and PAEE in free-living adults, such that irrespective of the objective method of PAEE assessment, a strong inverse association between PAEE and BMI was observed.

Keywords:
Estimation Energy expenditure Accelerometer Energy metabolism Physical activity Physical medicine and rehabilitation Medicine Gerontology Computer science Economics Internal medicine

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175
Cited By
10.09
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
20
Refs
0.99
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Physical Activity and Health
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Physiology
Cardiovascular and exercise physiology
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Complementary and alternative medicine
Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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