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  • Activities of daily living  (2)
  • Pedometer  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1439-6327
    Keywords: Pedometer ; Walking activity ; Accelerometer ; Activities of daily living ; Exertion
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary A small (28 g) mechanical accelerometer has been tested by subjecting it to controlled bench tests consisting of repetitive vertical oscillations on two designs of test rig. The accelerometer's 3-digit display provided a cumulated score with a maximum of 99.9 units. This score was compared with an independent count of the imposed oscillations and found to be linear with time (r=0.996) and reproducible on retest (coefficient of variation=± 1.5%). The sensitivity ranged from 6.2 to 7.4 units/10,000 oscillations. The response was related to the maximal applied acceleration (calculated from the amplitude and frequency of the oscillations on the assumption that they were sinusoidal) and independent of the amplitude and frequency used. The threshold maximal acceleration was less than 2 m s−2 and the response had reached a plateau at 4 ms−2. During field studies the accelerometer was firmly attached over the hip in a waistband where it responded to the vertical accelerations produced by walking. When compared with an independent count of footsteps from a heel-mounted resistance pad the accelerometer score (after calibration) was not significantly different. The mean difference was (0.29±0.67, S.D.) 103 “steps” in a younger group (n=8, mean age 39 years) and (0.46±1.08, S.D.) 103 “steps” in an older group of women (n=6, mean age 65 years). Scores of around 10×103 “steps” can be expected in a day in moderately active young subjects and 40 × 103 “steps” in a week in the elderly. Simultaneously recorded scores from both right and left hips were not significantly different. In young subjects the mean difference was typically (1.08±0.8) 103 steps in a daily score of 10 × 103 steps and for old subjects (3.5±10.4) 103 steps in a cumulated 6 day score of 40×103 steps. The accelerometer can therefore be used as a pedometer to give an estimate of the number of footsteps taken over long periods.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1439-6327
    Keywords: Activities of daily living ; Work ; Physical fitness ; Heart-rate ; Age factors
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary This paper describes a controlled study of the effects of an unsupervised walking-programme in 108 volunteers from among 580 middle-aged employees in a Nottingham light industrial company. Objective measurements of physical condition and of customary activity were made on four occasions at 12-week intervals. The subjects were randomly allocated to three groups and encouraged to follow a walking-programme in the first, second or third periods of the study: no activity was prescribed in the other periods. Compliance with the programme was estimated from log-cards and from a week's pedometer record. Although there were no significant differences between the changes seen in subjects following the walking-programme and those in control subjects, there were significant small improvements in physical condition and modest increases in customary activity in a) those subjects actually completing the programme, and b) the subjects measured before and after their programme, pooled without regard to the period of measurement. At least some of the increased activity is maintained for 12 weeks after the programme. The marginal changes suggest that the intensity of the training-programme as experienced by the subjects was close to the threshold for maintenance of physical condition in this age-group of workers.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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