13 results on '"Schuna, J M"'
Search Results
2. Changing the way we work: elevating energy expenditure with workstation alternatives
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Tudor-Locke, C, Schuna, J M, Jr, Frensham, L J, and Proenca, M
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- 2014
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3. Comparison of uniaxial and triaxial accelerometer outputs among individuals with and without Down syndrome
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Leung, W., primary, Schuna, J. M., additional, and Yun, J., additional
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- 2020
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4. Comparison of uniaxial and triaxial accelerometer outputs among individuals with and without Down syndrome.
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Leung, W., Schuna, J. M., and Yun, J.
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ACCELEROMETERS , *COMPARATIVE studies , *ENERGY metabolism , *WALKING , *DOWN syndrome , *ACCELEROMETRY , *OXYGEN consumption , *PHYSICAL activity , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: Using uniaxial accelerometry approach in measuring physical activity levels of individuals with Down syndrome (DS) might underestimate their energy expenditure due to the unique mediolateral walking pattern. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to examine and compare the relationship between two types of accelerometer outputs, uniaxial and triaxial, and energy expenditure in individuals with and without DS. Methods: Eighteen participants with DS and 19 participants without DS wore a GT3X+ accelerometer and a portable metabolic system in three different walking conditions. Results: Correlations between V̇O2 and each of the two accelerometer outputs (uniaxial: r = 0.75, triaxial: r = 0.75) were not significantly different among individuals without DS (z = 0.14, P = 0.89); however, significant differences in the relationship between V̇O2 and accelerometer outputs (uniaxial: r = 0.53, triaxial: r = 0.64) were observed among individuals with DS (z = −1.72, P < 0.046). Conclusions: The findings suggest that when using accelerometers to measure physical activity levels for individuals with DS, triaxial outputs may better predict physical activity levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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5. OBJECTIVELY MEASURED PHYSICAL ACTIVITY ACROSS OCCUPATIONS BASED ON THE NHANES
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Steeves, J, primary, Tudor-Locke, C, additional, A Murphy, R, additional, A King, G, additional, Bassett, D R, additional, Van Domelen, D, additional, Schuna, J M, additional, and B Harris, T, additional
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- 2018
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6. Why are there race/ethnic differences in adult body mass index-adiposity relationships? A quantitative critical review
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Heymsfield, S. B., primary, Peterson, C. M., additional, Thomas, D. M., additional, Heo, M., additional, and Schuna, J. M., additional
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- 2015
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7. Changing the way we work: elevating energy expenditure with workstation alternatives
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Tudor-Locke, C, primary, Schuna, J M, additional, Frensham, L J, additional, and Proenca, M, additional
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- 2013
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8. Normative Steps/Day Values for Older Adults: NHANES 2005-2006
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Tudor-Locke, C., primary, Schuna, J. M., additional, Barreira, T. V., additional, Mire, E. F., additional, Broyles, S. T., additional, Katzmarzyk, P. T., additional, and Johnson, W. D., additional
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- 2013
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9. Pattern changes in step count accumulation and peak cadence due to a physical activity intervention.
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Barreira, T.V., Harrington, D.M., Jr.Schuna, J.M., Tudor-Locke, C., Katzmarzyk, P.T., and Schuna, J M Jr
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Objectives: The purpose was to determine if a 12-week weight loss intervention with a physical activity (PA) component would lead to changes in steps/day, step count accumulation patterns, and peak cadence.Design: Randomized clinical trial.Methods: Overall, 121 overweight/obese White and African-American adults (ages 35-64yrs) were randomized to a diet education plus PA education and behavior change intervention group (DE+PA) or diet education and behavior change group (DE). The DE+PA intervention was designed to increase steps/day, and steps at moderate-to-vigorous intensity. The Actigraph GT3X+ accelerometer was used to measure steps accumulated in different cadence bands (1-19, 20-39, 40-59, 60-79, 80-99, 100-119, 120+ steps/min), and peak 1-min, 30-min and 60-min cadence. Pre- to post-intervention changes in steps/day, step count within each cadence band, and peak cadences were compared within groups using paired sample t-test and between groups after adjustment for baseline values of the same variable using ANCOVA.Results: Ninety participants had valid data (44 in the DE+PA group). Change in steps/day was not significantly different between the groups. However, participants in the DE+PA group accumulated significantly more steps at post-intervention in the 80-99, 100-119, and 120+ cadence bands, all p<0.02. The DE+PA group increased step counts accumulated within the 100-119 (463±1092 vs 56±546 step counts; p=0.01) and 120+ (390±999 vs 34±321 step counts; p=0.03) cadence bands, as well as peak 60-min cadence when compared to the DE group.Conclusions: Non-significant changes in steps/day following a PA intervention may mask changes in steps accumulated at moderate-to-vigorous intensity cadences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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10. Reliability of accelerometer-determined physical activity and sedentary behavior in school-aged children: a 12-country study
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Barreira, T V, Schuna, J M, Tudor-Locke, C, Chaput, J-P, Church, T S, Fogelholm, M, Hu, G, Kuriyan, R, Kurpad, A, Lambert, E V, Maher, C, Maia, J, Matsudo, V, Olds, T, Onywera, V, Sarmiento, O L, Standage, M, Tremblay, M S, Zhao, P, and Katzmarzyk, P T
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Objectives:Focused on the accelerometer-determined physical activity and sedentary time metrics in 9–11-year-old children, we sought to determine the following: (i) number of days that are necessary to achieve reliable estimates (G⩾0.8); (ii) proportion of variance attributed to different facets (participants and days) of reliability estimates; and (iii) actual reliability of data as collected in The International Study of Childhood Obesity, Lifestyle and Environment (ISCOLE).Methods:The analytical sample consisted of 6025 children (55% girls) from sites in 12 countries. Physical activity and sedentary time metrics measures were assessed for up to 7 consecutive days for 24 h per day with a waist-worn ActiGraph GT3X+. Generalizability theory using R software was used to investigate the objectives i and ii. Intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC) were computed using SAS PROC GLM to inform objective iii.Results:The estimated minimum number of days required to achieve a reliability estimate of G⩾0.8 ranged from 5 to 9 for boys and 3 to 11 for girls for light physical activity (LPA); 5 to 9 and 3 to 10, for moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA); 5 to 10 and 4 to 10 for total activity counts; and 7 to 11 and 6 to 11 for sedentary time, respectively. For all variables investigated, the ‘participant’ facet accounted for 30–50% of the variability, whereas the ‘days’ facet accounted for ⩽5%, and the interaction (P × D) accounted for 50–70% of the variability. The actual reliability for boys in ISCOLE ranged from ICCs of 0.78 to 0.86, 0.73 to 0.85 and 0.72 to 0.86 for LPA, MVPA and total activity counts, respectively, and 0.67 to 0.79 for sedentary time. The corresponding values for girls were 0.80–0.88, 0.70–0.89, 0.74–0.86 and 0.64–0.80.Conclusions:It was rare that only 4 days from all participants would be enough to achieve desirable reliability estimates. However, asking participants to wear the device for 7 days and requiring ⩾4 days of data to include the participant in the analysis might be an appropriate approach to achieve reliable estimates for most accelerometer-derived metrics.
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- 2015
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11. Nocturnal sleep-related variables from 24-h free-living waist-worn accelerometry: International Study of Childhood Obesity, Lifestyle and the Environment
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Tudor-Locke, C, Mire, E F, Barreira, T V, Schuna, J M, Chaput, J-P, Fogelholm, M, Hu, G, Kurpad, A, Kuriyan, R, Lambert, E V, Maher, C, Maia, J, Matsudo, V, Olds, T, Onywera, V, Sarmiento, O L, Standage, M, Tremblay, M S, Zhao, P, Church, T S, and Katzmarzyk, P T
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Objectives:We describe the process of identifying and defining nocturnal sleep-related variables (for example, movement/non-movement indicators of sleep efficiency, waking episodes, midpoint and so on) using the unique 24-h waist-worn free-living accelerometer data collected in the International Study of Childhood Obesity, Lifestyle and the Environment (ISCOLE).Methods:Seven consecutive days of 24-h waist-worn accelerometer (GT3X+, ActiGraph LLC) data were collected from over 500 children at each site. An expert subgroup of the research team with accelerometry expertize, frontline data collectors and data managers met on several occasions to categorize and operationally define nocturnal accelerometer signal data patterns. The iterative process was informed by the raw data drawn from a sub set of the US data, and culminated in a refined and replicable delineated definition for each identified nocturnal sleep-related variable. Ultimately based on 6318 participants from all 12 ISCOLE sites with valid total sleep episode time (TSET), we report average clock times for nocturnal sleep onset, offset and midpoint in addition to sleep period time, TSET and restful sleep efficiency (among other derived variables).Results:Nocturnal sleep onset occurred at 2218 hours and nocturnal sleep offset at 0707 hours. The mean midpoint was 0243 hours. The sleep period time of 529.6 min (8.8 h) was typically accumulated in a single episode, making the average TSET very similar in duration (529.0 min). The mean restful sleep efficiency ranged from 86.8% (based on absolute non-movement of 0 counts per minute) to 96.0% (based on relative non-movement of <100 counts per minute).Conclusions:These variables extend the potential of field-based 24-h waist-worn accelerometry to distinguish and categorize the underlying robust patterns of movement/non-movement signals conveying magnitude, duration, frequency and periodicity during the nocturnal sleep period.
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- 2015
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12. Unique contributions of ISCOLE to the advancement of accelerometry in large studies
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Tudor-Locke, C, Barreira, T V, Schuna, J M, and Katzmarzyk, P T
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Accelerometry has become a mainstay approach for objectively monitoring children’s physical activity and sedentary time in epidemiological studies. The magnitude of effort underlying successful data collection, management and treatment is prodigious and its complexity has been associated with increasingly diverse methodological choices that, while defensible relative to specific research questions, conspire to undermine the ability to compare results between studies. Although respecting widespread calls for best practices, it is also important to openly share tools and resources supporting potential improvements to research practice and study design, thus allowing others to replicate, further improve, and/or otherwise build on this foundation. The International Study of Childhood Obesity, Lifestyle and the Environment (ISCOLE) is a large multinational study that included accelerometer-based measures of physical activity, sedentary time and sleep. This review summarizes the unique contributions of ISCOLE to the advancement of accelerometry in large studies of children’s behavior, and in particular: (1) open-access publication of the ISCOLE accelerometry Manual of Operations; (2) 24-h waist-worn accelerometry protocol; (3) identification and extraction of nocturnal total sleep episode time (with open access to editable SAS syntax); (4) development of the first interpretive infrastructure for identifying and defining an evolved list of sleep-related variables from 24-h waist-worn accelerometry; (5) provision of a detailed model for reporting accelerometer paradata (administrative data related to accelerometry); and (6) cataloging the most detailed and defensible list of accelerometry-derived physical activity and sedentary time variables to date. The novel tools and resources associated with these innovations are shared openly in an effort to support methodological harmonization and overall advancement of accelerometry in large epidemiological studies.
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- 2015
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13. Improving wear time compliance with a 24-hour waist-worn accelerometer protocol in the International Study of Childhood Obesity, Lifestyle and the Environment (ISCOLE)
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Tudor Locke, C., Barreira, T. V., Schuna, J. M., Mire, E. F., Chaput, J. P., Fogelholm, M., Hu, G., Kuriyan, R., Kurpad, A., Lambert, E. V., Maher, C., Maia, J., Matsudo, V., Olds, T., Onywera, V., Sarmiento, O. L., Standage, M., Tremblay, M. S., Zhao, P., Church, T. S., Katzmarzyk, P. T., Lambert, D. G., Barreira, T., Broyles, S., Butitta, B., Champagne, C., Cocreham, S., Dentro, K., Drazba, K., Harrington, D., Johnson, W., Milauskas, D., Mire, E., Tohme, A., Rodarte, R., Amoroso, B., Luopa, J., Neiberg, R., Rushing, S., Lewis, L., Ferrar, K., Physio, B., Georgiadis, E., Stanley, R., Matsudo, V. K. R., Matsudo, S., Araujo, T., de Oliveira, L. C., Rezende, L., Fabiano, L., Bezerra, D., Ferrari, G., Bélanger, P., Borghese, M., Boyer, C., Leblanc, A., Francis, C., Leduc, G., Diao, C., Li, W., Liu, E., Liu, G., Liu, H., Ma, J., Qiao, Y., Tian, H., Wang, Y., Zhang, T., Zhang, F., Sarmiento, O., Acosta, J., Alvira, Y., Diaz, M. P., Gamez, R., Garcia, M. P., Gómez, L. G., Gonzalez, L., Gonzalez, S., Grijalba, C., Gutierrez, L., Leal, D., Lemus, N., Mahecha, E., Mahecha, M. P., Mahecha, R., Ramirez, A., Rios, P., Suarez, A., Triana, C., Hovi, E., Kivelä, J., Räsänen, S., Roito, S., Saloheimo, T., Valta, L., Lokesh, D. P., D'Almeida, M. S., Annie Mattilda, R., Correa, L., Vijay, D., Wachira, L. J., Muthuri, S., da Silva Borges, A., Oliveira Sá Cachada, S., de Chaves, R. N., Gomes, T. N. Q. F., Pereira, S. I. S., de Vilhena e. Santos, D. M., dos Santos, F. K., Rodrigues da Silva, P. G., de Souza, M. C., Lambert, V., April, M., Uys, M., Naidoo, N., Synyanya, N., Carstens, M., Donatto, S., Lemon, C., Jackson, A., Pearson, A., Pennington, G., Ragus, D., Roubion, R., Schuna, J., Wiltz, D., Batterham, A., Kerr, J., Pratt, M., Pietrobelli, Angelo, ISCOLE Research Group, Tudor-Locke, Catrine, Barreira, Tiago V, Schuna, John M, Mire, Emily F, Maher, Carol A, Olds, Timothy S, Katzmarzyk, Peter T, University of Helsinki, Department of Food and Nutrition, Nutrition Science, MRC/UCT RU for Exercise and Sport Medicine, and Faculty of Health Sciences
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Male ,Gerontology ,Pediatric Obesity ,Time Factors ,Accelerometry, Exercise, Measurement, Physical activity, Sedentary time, Pediatrics ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,RA773 ,Accelerometer ,Pediatrics ,0302 clinical medicine ,Clinical Protocols ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Accelerometry ,030212 general & internal medicine ,315 Sport and fitness sciences ,Child ,Measurement ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,ALGORITHMS ,Nutrition Surveys ,16. Peace & justice ,3. Good health ,Sedentary time ,Female ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Waist ,National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey ,Physical activity ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Motor Activity ,Childhood obesity ,03 medical and health sciences ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,medicine ,Humans ,WRIST ,Accelerometer data ,Wakefulness ,Life Style ,Exercise ,Protocol (science) ,HIP ,business.industry ,Methodology ,030229 sport sciences ,medicine.disease ,United States ,PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY ,Physical therapy ,Sleep ,business - Abstract
Background We compared 24-hour waist-worn accelerometer wear time characteristics of 9–11 year old children in the International Study of Childhood Obesity, Lifestyle and the Environment (ISCOLE) to similarly aged U.S. children providing waking-hours waist-worn accelerometer data in the 2003–2006 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). Methods Valid cases were defined as having ≥4 days with ≥10 hours of waking wear time in a 24-hour period, including one weekend day. Previously published algorithms for extracting total sleep episode time from 24-hour accelerometer data and for identifying wear time (in both the 24-hour and waking-hours protocols) were applied. The number of valid days obtained and a ratio (percent) of valid cases to the number of participants originally wearing an accelerometer were computed for both ISCOLE and NHANES. Given the two surveys’ discrepant sampling designs, wear time (minutes/day, hours/day) from U.S. ISCOLE was compared to NHANES using a meta-analytic approach. Wear time for the 11 additional countries participating in ISCOLE were graphically compared with NHANES. Results 491 U.S. ISCOLE children (9.92±0.03 years of age [M±SE]) and 586 NHANES children (10.43 ± 0.04 years of age) were deemed valid cases. The ratio of valid cases to the number of participants originally wearing an accelerometer was 76.7% in U.S. ISCOLE and 62.6% in NHANES. Wear time averaged 1357.0 ± 4.2 minutes per 24-hour day in ISCOLE. Waking wear time was 884.4 ± 2.2 minutes/day for U.S. ISCOLE children and 822.6 ± 4.3 minutes/day in NHANES children (difference = 61.8 minutes/day, p
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