Convergent validity of six methods to assess physical activity in daily life. Macfarlane, D. J, Lee, C. C Y, Ho, E. Y K, Chan, K L, & Chan, D. Journal of Applied Physiology (Bethesda, Md.: 1985), 101(5):1328–1334, November, 2006. Paper doi abstract bibtex The purpose was to examine the agreement (convergent validity) between six common measures of habitual physical activity to estimate durations of light, moderate, vigorous, and total activity in a range of free-living individuals. Over 7 consecutive days, 49 ethnic Chinese (30 men, 19 women), aged 15-55 yr, wore a Polar heart rate monitor, a uniaxial MTI, and triaxial Tritrac accelerometer, plus a Yamax pedometer for \textgreater or = 600 min/day. They also completed a daily physical activity log and on day 8 a Chinese version of the 7-day International Physical Activity Questionnaire. At each level of activity, there was good agreement between the two questionnaire-derived instruments and the two accelerometry-derived instruments, but wide variation across different instruments, with two- to fourfold differences in mean durations often seen. The heart rate monitor overestimated light activity and underestimated moderate activity compared with all other measures. Spearman correlation coefficients were low to moderate (0.2-0.5) across most measures of activity, with the pedometer showing correlations with total activity that were often superior to the other movement sensors. We conclude that, with the use of commonly accepted cut points for defining light, moderate, vigorous, and total activity, little convergent validity across the instruments was evident, suggesting these measures are sampling different levels of habitual physical activity and care is needed when comparing their results. To provide a more stable comparison of activity among different people, across studies, or against accepted physical activity promotion guidelines, further work is needed to fine tune the different cut points across a range of common activity monitors to provide more consistent results during free-living conditions.
@article{macfarlane_convergent_2006,
title = {Convergent validity of six methods to assess physical activity in daily life},
volume = {101},
issn = {8750-7587},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16825525},
doi = {10.1152/japplphysiol.00336.2006},
abstract = {The purpose was to examine the agreement (convergent validity) between six common measures of habitual physical activity to estimate durations of light, moderate, vigorous, and total activity in a range of free-living individuals. Over 7 consecutive days, 49 ethnic Chinese (30 men, 19 women), aged 15-55 yr, wore a Polar heart rate monitor, a uniaxial MTI, and triaxial Tritrac accelerometer, plus a Yamax pedometer for {\textgreater} or = 600 min/day. They also completed a daily physical activity log and on day 8 a Chinese version of the 7-day International Physical Activity Questionnaire. At each level of activity, there was good agreement between the two questionnaire-derived instruments and the two accelerometry-derived instruments, but wide variation across different instruments, with two- to fourfold differences in mean durations often seen. The heart rate monitor overestimated light activity and underestimated moderate activity compared with all other measures. Spearman correlation coefficients were low to moderate (0.2-0.5) across most measures of activity, with the pedometer showing correlations with total activity that were often superior to the other movement sensors. We conclude that, with the use of commonly accepted cut points for defining light, moderate, vigorous, and total activity, little convergent validity across the instruments was evident, suggesting these measures are sampling different levels of habitual physical activity and care is needed when comparing their results. To provide a more stable comparison of activity among different people, across studies, or against accepted physical activity promotion guidelines, further work is needed to fine tune the different cut points across a range of common activity monitors to provide more consistent results during free-living conditions.},
number = {5},
urldate = {2010-02-17},
journal = {Journal of Applied Physiology (Bethesda, Md.: 1985)},
author = {Macfarlane, Duncan J and Lee, Cherry C Y and Ho, Edmond Y K and Chan, K L and Chan, Dionise},
month = nov,
year = {2006},
pmid = {16825525},
keywords = {Activities of Daily Living, Adolescent, Adult, China, Female, Heart Rate, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Monitoring, Ambulatory, Motor Activity, Questionnaires, Reproducibility of Results, Time Factors},
pages = {1328--1334},
}
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They also completed a daily physical activity log and on day 8 a Chinese version of the 7-day International Physical Activity Questionnaire. At each level of activity, there was good agreement between the two questionnaire-derived instruments and the two accelerometry-derived instruments, but wide variation across different instruments, with two- to fourfold differences in mean durations often seen. The heart rate monitor overestimated light activity and underestimated moderate activity compared with all other measures. Spearman correlation coefficients were low to moderate (0.2-0.5) across most measures of activity, with the pedometer showing correlations with total activity that were often superior to the other movement sensors. We conclude that, with the use of commonly accepted cut points for defining light, moderate, vigorous, and total activity, little convergent validity across the instruments was evident, suggesting these measures are sampling different levels of habitual physical activity and care is needed when comparing their results. To provide a more stable comparison of activity among different people, across studies, or against accepted physical activity promotion guidelines, further work is needed to fine tune the different cut points across a range of common activity monitors to provide more consistent results during free-living conditions.","number":"5","urldate":"2010-02-17","journal":"Journal of Applied Physiology (Bethesda, Md.: 1985)","author":[{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Macfarlane"],"firstnames":["Duncan","J"],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Lee"],"firstnames":["Cherry","C","Y"],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Ho"],"firstnames":["Edmond","Y","K"],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Chan"],"firstnames":["K","L"],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Chan"],"firstnames":["Dionise"],"suffixes":[]}],"month":"November","year":"2006","pmid":"16825525","keywords":"Activities of Daily Living, Adolescent, Adult, China, Female, Heart Rate, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Monitoring, Ambulatory, Motor Activity, Questionnaires, Reproducibility of Results, Time Factors","pages":"1328–1334","bibtex":"@article{macfarlane_convergent_2006,\n\ttitle = {Convergent validity of six methods to assess physical activity in daily life},\n\tvolume = {101},\n\tissn = {8750-7587},\n\turl = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16825525},\n\tdoi = {10.1152/japplphysiol.00336.2006},\n\tabstract = {The purpose was to examine the agreement (convergent validity) between six common measures of habitual physical activity to estimate durations of light, moderate, vigorous, and total activity in a range of free-living individuals. Over 7 consecutive days, 49 ethnic Chinese (30 men, 19 women), aged 15-55 yr, wore a Polar heart rate monitor, a uniaxial MTI, and triaxial Tritrac accelerometer, plus a Yamax pedometer for {\\textgreater} or = 600 min/day. They also completed a daily physical activity log and on day 8 a Chinese version of the 7-day International Physical Activity Questionnaire. At each level of activity, there was good agreement between the two questionnaire-derived instruments and the two accelerometry-derived instruments, but wide variation across different instruments, with two- to fourfold differences in mean durations often seen. The heart rate monitor overestimated light activity and underestimated moderate activity compared with all other measures. Spearman correlation coefficients were low to moderate (0.2-0.5) across most measures of activity, with the pedometer showing correlations with total activity that were often superior to the other movement sensors. 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