Authors
Dylan P Cliff, John J Reilly, Anthony D Okely
Publication date
2009/9/1
Source
Journal of science and medicine in sport
Volume
12
Issue
5
Pages
557-567
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
This paper reviews the evidence behind the methodological decisions accelerometer users make when assessing habitual physical activity in children aged 0–5 years. The purpose of the review is to outline an evidence-guided protocol for using accelerometry in young children and to identify gaps in the evidence base where further investigation is required. Studies evaluating accelerometry methodologies in young children were reviewed in two age groups (0–2 years and 3–5 years) to examine: (i) which accelerometer should be used, (ii) where the accelerometer should be placed, (iii) which epoch should be used, (iv) how many days of monitoring are required, (v) how many minutes of monitoring per day are required, (vi) how data should be reduced, (vii) which cut-point definitions for identifying activity intensity should be used, and (viii) which physical activity outcomes should be reported and how. Critique of …
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