This cross-sectional study using direct motion monitoring evaluated whether short epochs increased estimates of moderate or vigorous physical activity (MPA or VPA) and enhanced differences in daily VPA comparing overweight (OW) and nonoverweight (NOW) children. Seventy-seven children (ages 8-10 years) wore accelerometers for 7 days. We calculated two estimates (mean minutes per day) of MPA and VPA using motion counts based on a 15-s epoch and a calculated 60-s epoch produced by totaling each consecutive group of four 15-s motion counts. We compared estimates as a function of mean motion count·min −1 for sex, age, and status as OW or NOW. The results showed that a 15-s epoch produced higher estimates of VPA (mean difference of 7 min per day, p < .001). The average number of VPA minutes added using the 15-s epoch vs. the 60-s epoch was 8.8 for more active children compared with 5.8 for less active children (p < .001). There was no difference in VPA minutes between OW and NOW children. These findings suggest modestly increased sensitivity to VPA using shorter epochs; this was particularly true for the most active children. Shorter epochs, however, might not be useful in clarifying the relationship between VPA and obesity in children.
Keywords accelerometer; child; epoch; vigorousThe rise in childhood obesity has produced a wealth of studies describing the relationship between physical activity levels and body mass among U.S. children. Direct motion monitoring with accelerometers has become the preferred assessment method due to improved accuracy of physical activity estimates compared with self-reporting techniques (Trost, McIver, & Pate, 2005;Welk, 2000). Accelerometers quantify the intensity of body motion relative to gravitational forces over a predetermined period, traditionally 1 min, called a motion count. Depending on the value, each motion count may indicate vigorous, moderate, light, or sedentary physical activity intensity (Chen et al., 2005;Trost, McIver, & Pate, 2005). Totaling individual motion counts in each category helps determine how much
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Author ManuscriptRes Q Exerc Sport. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2011 August 8.
NIH-PA Author ManuscriptNIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author Manuscript moderate and vigorous physical activity (MPA and VPA) children routinely perform and how these levels relate to obesity (Ekelund et al., 2007;Pate et al., 2002).Previous generations of accelerometers used a sampling interval of 60 s and generated a motion count·min −1 as the primary unit of measurement (Bray, Wong, Morrow, Butte, & Pivarnik, 1994;Chen et al., 2005;Coe, 2001;Masse et al., 2005;Puyau, Adolph, Vohra, Zakeri, & Butte, 2004;Puyau, Adolph, Vohra, & Butte, 2002). Numerous descriptive studies showed that these 60-s epochs captured less than 10 min of VPA in children in a typical day (Cradock et al., 2004;Mota, 2003;Pate et al., 2002). Observational and direct motion monitoring studies in schools and other settings also have shown that children tend to perform VPA in sho...