Journal: The International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity
Article Title: A catalog of validity indices for step counting wearable technologies during treadmill walking: the CADENCE-adults study
doi: 10.1186/s12966-022-01350-9
Figure Lengend Snippet: Effect of age on overall accuracy (mean absolute percentage error, MAPE) of wearable technologies’ step counting ability. MAPE and corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CIs; estimated using mixed effect models) of each age group are presented at slow, normal, and fast walking speeds. MAPE values were averaged across devices respective to each age group for slow, normal, and fast walking speeds. Slow speed bouts: 0.8, 1.6, 2.4, 3.2 km/h (0.5, 1.0, 1.5, 2.0 mph); normal speed bouts: 4.0, 4.8, 5.6, 6.4 km/h (2.5, 3.0, 3.5, 4.0 mph); fast speed bouts: 7.2, 8.0 km/h (4.5, 5.0 mph). MAPE values closer to 0 represent greater accuracy. The 95% CIs bars were not drawn when they were shorter than the height of the symbol. Further, where 95% CIs do not overlap, there are significant differences between locations. Likelihood ratio test P value is reported for the effect of age on MAPE for each specific speed level. All age groups (21–85 years) wore the Actical ( N = 250), ActiGraph GT9X (Waist) ( N = 254), ActiGraph GT9X (Wrist) ( N = 254), activPAL ( N = 249), Digi-Walker SW-200 ( N = 258), GENEActiv (Waist) ( N = 224), GENEActiv (Wrist) ( N = 217), NL-1000 ( N = 258), and the StepWatch ( N = 253). Young Adults (21–40 years) also wore the Fitbit One ( N = 80) and Garmin vivofit 2 ( N = 80). Middle-Age Adults (41–60 years) also wore the Apple Watch Series 1 ( N = 76), Fitbit One ( N = 80), Garmin vivoactive HR ( N = 77), Garmin vivofit 3 ( N = 77), and the Samsung Gear Fit2 ( N = 80). Older Adults (61–85 years) also wore the AppleWatch Series 1 ( N = 98), Fitbit Ionic ( N = 98), Fitbit Zip ( N = 98), Garmin vivoactive 3 ( N = 96), PiezoRx ( N = 98), Polar M600 ( N = 97), and the Samsung Gear Fit2 Pro ( N = 98). See Additional file for a graphical classification of wearable technologies by age groups
Article Snippet: See Additional file : Suppl Fig. 1 and Suppl Table 1 for visual and tabular description of device locations, settings, distribution among age groups, and initialization and data extraction procedures: StepWatch (OrthoCare Innovations, Seattle, WA, USA) on the right ankle; an activPAL (PAL Technologies Ltd, Glasgow, UK) on the right thigh; an Actical (Philips Respironics, Murrysville, PA, USA), ActiGraph GT9X (ActiGraph, Pensacola, FL, USA), GENEActiv (Activinsights Ltd, Cambridgeshire, UK), New Lifestyles NL-1000 (New Lifestyles Inc., Lee’s Summit, MO, USA) and Fitbit One (Fitbit Inc, San Francisco, CA, USA) on the right waist, and a Digi-Walker SW-200 (Yamax Corporation, Tokyo, Japan), Fitbit Zip and PiezoRx (StepsCount, Ontario, Canada) on the left waist; an ActiGraph GT9X, Garmin vivoactive 3 (Garmin International Inc., Olathe, KS, USA), Garmin vivoactive HR, Garmin vivofit 2, Garmin vivofit 3, GENEActiv and Polar M600 (Polar Electro Oy, Kempele, Finland) on the non-dominant wrist, and an Apple Watch Series 1 (Apple Inc., Cupertino, CA USA), Fitbit Ionic (Fitbit Inc, San Francisco, CA, USA), Samsung Gear Fit2 (Samsung Electronics America Inc., Ridgefield Park, NJ, USA) and Samsung Gear Fit2 Pro on the dominant wrist.
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