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Autocalibration of accelerometer data for free-living physical activity assessment using local gravity and temperature: an evaluation on four continents

Wearable acceleration sensors are increasingly used for the assessment of free-living physical activity. Acceleration sensor calibration is a potential source of error. This study aims to describe and evaluate an autocalibration method to minimize calibration error using segments within the free-liv...

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Autores principales: van Hees, Vincent T., Fang, Zhou, Langford, Joss, Assah, Felix, Mohammad, Anwar, da Silva, Inacio C. M., Trenell, Michael I., White, Tom, Wareham, Nicholas J., Brage, Søren
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Physiological Society 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4187052/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25103964
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00421.2014
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author van Hees, Vincent T.
Fang, Zhou
Langford, Joss
Assah, Felix
Mohammad, Anwar
da Silva, Inacio C. M.
Trenell, Michael I.
White, Tom
Wareham, Nicholas J.
Brage, Søren
author_facet van Hees, Vincent T.
Fang, Zhou
Langford, Joss
Assah, Felix
Mohammad, Anwar
da Silva, Inacio C. M.
Trenell, Michael I.
White, Tom
Wareham, Nicholas J.
Brage, Søren
author_sort van Hees, Vincent T.
collection PubMed
description Wearable acceleration sensors are increasingly used for the assessment of free-living physical activity. Acceleration sensor calibration is a potential source of error. This study aims to describe and evaluate an autocalibration method to minimize calibration error using segments within the free-living records (no extra experiments needed). The autocalibration method entailed the extraction of nonmovement periods in the data, for which the measured vector magnitude should ideally be the gravitational acceleration (1 g); this property was used to derive calibration correction factors using an iterative closest-point fitting process. The reduction in calibration error was evaluated in data from four cohorts: UK (n = 921), Kuwait (n = 120), Cameroon (n = 311), and Brazil (n = 200). Our method significantly reduced calibration error in all cohorts (P < 0.01), ranging from 16.6 to 3.0 mg in the Kuwaiti cohort to 76.7 to 8.0 mg error in the Brazil cohort. Utilizing temperature sensor data resulted in a small nonsignificant additional improvement (P > 0.05). Temperature correction coefficients were highest for the z-axis, e.g., 19.6-mg offset per 5°C. Further, application of the autocalibration method had a significant impact on typical metrics used for describing human physical activity, e.g., in Brazil average wrist acceleration was 0.2 to 51% lower than uncalibrated values depending on metric selection (P < 0.01). The autocalibration method as presented helps reduce the calibration error in wearable acceleration sensor data and improves comparability of physical activity measures across study locations. Temperature ultization seems essential when temperature deviates substantially from the average temperature in the record but not for multiday summary measures.
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spelling pubmed-41870522014-10-16 Autocalibration of accelerometer data for free-living physical activity assessment using local gravity and temperature: an evaluation on four continents van Hees, Vincent T. Fang, Zhou Langford, Joss Assah, Felix Mohammad, Anwar da Silva, Inacio C. M. Trenell, Michael I. White, Tom Wareham, Nicholas J. Brage, Søren J Appl Physiol (1985) Articles Wearable acceleration sensors are increasingly used for the assessment of free-living physical activity. Acceleration sensor calibration is a potential source of error. This study aims to describe and evaluate an autocalibration method to minimize calibration error using segments within the free-living records (no extra experiments needed). The autocalibration method entailed the extraction of nonmovement periods in the data, for which the measured vector magnitude should ideally be the gravitational acceleration (1 g); this property was used to derive calibration correction factors using an iterative closest-point fitting process. The reduction in calibration error was evaluated in data from four cohorts: UK (n = 921), Kuwait (n = 120), Cameroon (n = 311), and Brazil (n = 200). Our method significantly reduced calibration error in all cohorts (P < 0.01), ranging from 16.6 to 3.0 mg in the Kuwaiti cohort to 76.7 to 8.0 mg error in the Brazil cohort. Utilizing temperature sensor data resulted in a small nonsignificant additional improvement (P > 0.05). Temperature correction coefficients were highest for the z-axis, e.g., 19.6-mg offset per 5°C. Further, application of the autocalibration method had a significant impact on typical metrics used for describing human physical activity, e.g., in Brazil average wrist acceleration was 0.2 to 51% lower than uncalibrated values depending on metric selection (P < 0.01). The autocalibration method as presented helps reduce the calibration error in wearable acceleration sensor data and improves comparability of physical activity measures across study locations. Temperature ultization seems essential when temperature deviates substantially from the average temperature in the record but not for multiday summary measures. American Physiological Society 2014-08-07 2014-10-01 /pmc/articles/PMC4187052/ /pubmed/25103964 http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00421.2014 Text en Copyright © 2014 the American Physiological Society Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution CC-BY 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en_US) : © the American Physiological Society.
spellingShingle Articles
van Hees, Vincent T.
Fang, Zhou
Langford, Joss
Assah, Felix
Mohammad, Anwar
da Silva, Inacio C. M.
Trenell, Michael I.
White, Tom
Wareham, Nicholas J.
Brage, Søren
Autocalibration of accelerometer data for free-living physical activity assessment using local gravity and temperature: an evaluation on four continents
title Autocalibration of accelerometer data for free-living physical activity assessment using local gravity and temperature: an evaluation on four continents
title_full Autocalibration of accelerometer data for free-living physical activity assessment using local gravity and temperature: an evaluation on four continents
title_fullStr Autocalibration of accelerometer data for free-living physical activity assessment using local gravity and temperature: an evaluation on four continents
title_full_unstemmed Autocalibration of accelerometer data for free-living physical activity assessment using local gravity and temperature: an evaluation on four continents
title_short Autocalibration of accelerometer data for free-living physical activity assessment using local gravity and temperature: an evaluation on four continents
title_sort autocalibration of accelerometer data for free-living physical activity assessment using local gravity and temperature: an evaluation on four continents
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4187052/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25103964
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00421.2014
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