1. Agreement in activity energy expenditure assessed by accelerometer and self-report in adolescents: Variation by sex, age, and weight status.
- Author
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Machado-Rodrigues, AristidesM., Coelho-E-Silva, ManuelJ., Mota, Jorge, Cyrino, Edilson, Cumming, SeanP., Riddoch, Chris, Beunen, Gaston, and Malina, RobertM.
- Subjects
ANALYSIS of variance ,BODY weight ,CHI-squared test ,ENERGY metabolism ,EXERCISE ,FISHER exact test ,PROBABILITY theory ,RESEARCH funding ,SELF-evaluation ,BODY mass index ,ACCELEROMETRY ,CROSS-sectional method ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
The agreement between self-reported and objective estimates of activity energy expenditure was evaluated in adolescents by age, sex, and weight status. Altogether, 403 participants (217 females, 186 males) aged 13–16 years completed a 3-day physical activity diary and wore a GT1M accelerometer on the same days. Partial correlations (controlling for body mass) were used to determine associations between estimated activity energy expenditure (kcal · min−1) from the diary and accelerometry. Differences in the magnitude of the correlations were examined using Fisher's r to z transformations. Bland–Altman procedures were used to determine concordance between the self-reported and objective estimates. Partial correlations between assessments of activity energy expenditure (kcal · min−1) did not differ significantly by age (13–14 years: r = 0.41; 15–16 years: r = 0.42) or weight status (normal weight: r = 0.42; overweight: r = 0.39). The magnitude of the association was significantly affected by sex (Δr = 0.11; P < 0.05). The agreement was significantly higher in males than in females. The relationship between activity energy expenditure assessed by the objective method and the 3-day diary was moderate (controlling for weight, correlations ranged between 0.33 and 0.44). However, the 3-day diary revealed less agreement in specific group analyses; it markedly underestimated activity energy expenditure in overweight/obese and older adolescents. The assessment of activity energy expenditure is complex and may require a combination of methods. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
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