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Identifying bedrest using waist-worn triaxial accelerometers in preschool children.
Citation | “Identifying Bedrest Using Waist-Worn Triaxial Accelerometers In Preschool Children.”. Plos One, p. e0246055. . |
Center | Vanderbilt University |
Author | Dustin Tracy, Thomas Donnelly, Evan C Sommer, William J Heerman, Shari L Barkin, Maciej S Buchowski |
Abstract |
PURPOSE: To adapt and validate a previously developed decision tree for youth to identify bedrest for use in preschool children. METHODS: Parents of healthy preschool (3-6-year-old) children (n = 610; 294 males) were asked to help them to wear an accelerometer for 7 to 10 days and 24 hours/day on their waist. Children with ≥3 nights of valid recordings were randomly allocated to the development (n = 200) and validation (n = 200) groups. Wear periods from accelerometer recordings were identified minute-by-minute as bedrest or wake using visual identification by two independent raters. To automate visual identification, chosen decision tree (DT) parameters (block length, threshold, bedrest-start trigger, and bedrest-end trigger) were optimized in the development group using a Nelder-Mead simplex optimization method, which maximized the accuracy of DT-identified bedrest in 1-min epochs against synchronized visually identified bedrest (n = 4,730,734). DT's performance with optimized parameters was compared with the visual identification, commonly used Sadeh's sleep detection algorithm, DT for youth (10-18-years-old), and parental survey of sleep duration in the validation group. RESULTS: On average, children wore an accelerometer for 8.3 days and 20.8 hours/day. Comparing the DT-identified bedrest with visual identification in the validation group yielded sensitivity = 0.941, specificity = 0.974, and accuracy = 0.956. The optimal block length was 36 min, the threshold 230 counts/min, the bedrest-start trigger 305 counts/min, and the bedrest-end trigger 1,129 counts/min. In the validation group, DT identified bedrest with greater accuracy than Sadeh's algorithm (0.956 and 0.902) and DT for youth (0.956 and 0.861) (both P<0.001). Both DT (564±77 min/day) and Sadeh's algorithm (604±80 min/day) identified significantly less bedrest/sleep than parental survey (650±81 min/day) (both P<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: The DT-based algorithm initially developed for youth was adapted for preschool children to identify time spent in bedrest with high accuracy. The DT is available as a package for the R open-source software environment ("PhysActBedRest"). |
Year of Publication |
2021
|
Journal |
PloS one
|
Volume |
16
|
Issue |
1
|
Number of Pages |
e0246055
|
Date Published |
12/2021
|
ISSN Number |
1932-6203
|
DOI |
10.1371/journal.pone.0246055
|
Alternate Journal |
PLoS One
|
PMID |
33507967
|
PMCID |
PMC7842939
|
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