A stepwise validation of a wearable system for estimating energy expenditure infield-based research
Version
Published
Date Issued
2011
Author(s)
Type
Article
Language
English
Subjects
Abstract
Regular physical activity (PA) is an important contributor to a healthy lifestyle. Currently, standard sensor-based methods to assess PA in field-based research rely on a single accelerometer mounted near the body's center of mass. This paper introduces a wearable system that estimates energy expenditure (EE) based on seven recognized activity types. The system was developed with data from 32 healthy subjects and consists of a chest mounted heart rate belt and two accelerometers attached to a thigh and dominant upper arm. The system was validated with 12 other subjects under restricted lab conditions and simulated free-living conditions against indirect calorimetry, as well as in subjects' habitual environments for 2 weeks against the doubly labeled water method. Our stepwise validation methodology gradually trades reference information from the lab against realistic data from the field. The average accuracy for EE estimation was 88% for restricted lab conditions, 55% for simulated free-living conditions and 87% and 91% for the estimation of average daily EE over the period of 1 and 2 weeks.
Publisher DOI
Journal or Serie
Physiological Measurement
ISSN
0967-3334 (Print) 1361-6579 (Online)
Volume
32
Issue
12
Publisher
IOP Publishing
Submitter
ServiceAccount
Citation apa
Rumo, M., Amft, O., Tröster, G., & Mäder, U. (2011). A stepwise validation of a wearable system for estimating energy expenditure infield-based research. In Physiological Measurement (Vol. 32, Issue 12, pp. 1983–2001). IOP Publishing. https://arbor.bfh.ch/handle/arbor/31498
