| Literature DB >> 23667631 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Physical activity is inversely correlated to morbidity and mortality risk. Large cohort studies use wearable accelerometer devices to measure physical activity objectively, providing data potentially relevant to identify different activity patterns and to correlate these to health-related outcome measures. A method to compute relevant characteristics of such data not only with regard to duration and intensity, but also to regularity of activity events, is necessary. The aims of this paper are to propose a new method--the ATLAS index (Activity Types from Long-term Accelerometric Sensor data)--to derive generic measures for distinguishing different characteristic activity phenotypes from accelerometer data, to propose a comprehensive graphical representation, and to conduct a proof-of-concept with long-term measurements from different devices and cohorts.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23667631 PMCID: PMC3648464 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0063522
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Sources of data sets used for the proof-of-concept study for the ATLAS index (Activity Types from Long-term Accelerometric Sensor data).
| data set/patient # | cohort | device type | avg. duration per participant [days] | notes |
| 1–9 | LASS study | SenseWear Pro2 | 5.4 | device estimates METs |
| 10 | German National Cohort pre-study | ActiGraph GT3X+ | 7 | calibrated raw accelerometer data |
| 11–12 | fall risk observation study | SHIMMER 2R | 6.8 | un-calibrated raw accelerometer data |
The author is part of the teams conducting all three studies.
Figure 1Proposed graphical representation of the ATLAS index as a three-dimensional cube.
The three axes represent the regularity (x), the duration (y) in [mins/1000*mins] and the intensity (z). Five characteristic activity patterns are represented by coloured spheres.
Proposed activity type groups and value ranges for the three dimensions regularity, duration and intensity for graphical representation of the ATLAS index (Activity Types from Long-term Accelerometric Sensor data).
| group name | regularity | duration | intensity |
| ‘weekend warrior’ | low | high | high |
| ‘insufficiently active’ | low | low | low |
| ‘busy bee’ | high | low | low |
| ‘cardio active’ | high | medium | medium |
| ‘endurance athlete’ | high | high | medium-high |
Figure 2Three-dimensional representation of the 12 data sets used for the proof-of-concept study of the new ATLAS index.
The three axes represent the regularity (x), the duration (y) in [mins/1000*mins] and the intensity (z).