Authors
Emily LC Shepard, Rory P Wilson, Lewis G Halsey, Flavio Quintana, Agustina Gómez Laich, Adrian C Gleiss, Nikolai Liebsch, Andrew E Myers, Brad Norman
Publication date
2008/12/23
Journal
Aquatic Biology
Volume
4
Issue
3
Pages
235-241
Description
Animal movement, as measured by the overall dynamic body acceleration (ODBA), has recently been shown to correlate well with energy expenditure. However, accelerometers measure a summed acceleration derived from 2 components: static (due to gravity) and dynamic (due to motion). Since only the dynamic component is necessary for the calculation of ODBA, there is a need to establish a robust method for determining dynamic acceleration, currently done by substracting static values from the total acceleration. This study investigated the variability in ODBA arising from deriving static acceleration by smoothing total acceleration over different durations. ODBA was calculated for 3 different modes of locomotion within 1 species (the imperial shag) and for swimming in 4 species of marine vertebrates that varied considerably in body size. ODBA was found to vary significantly with the length of the running mean …
Total citations
20092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320242588171521172516192428282217
Scholar articles
ELC Shepard, RP Wilson, LG Halsey, F Quintana… - Aquatic Biology, 2008