Accuracy of Wrist-Worn Activity Monitors During Common Daily Physical Activities and Types of Structured Exercise: Evaluation Study

BackgroundWrist-worn activity monitors are often used to monitor heart rate (HR) and energy expenditure (EE) in a variety of settings including more recently in medical applications. The use of real-time physiological signals to inform medical systems including drug delivery...

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Main Authors: Reddy, Ravi Kondama, Pooni, Rubin, Zaharieva, Dessi P, Senf, Brian, El Youssef, Joseph, Dassau, Eyal, Doyle III, Francis J, Clements, Mark A, Rickels, Michael R, Patton, Susana R, Castle, Jessica R, Riddell, Michael C, Jacobs, Peter G
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2018-12-01
Series:JMIR mHealth and uHealth
Online Access:https://mhealth.jmir.org/2018/12/e10338/
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spelling doaj-f4e2d5210b4e49e0b3ef8f406ab6cca02021-05-03T04:33:11ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR mHealth and uHealth2291-52222018-12-01612e1033810.2196/10338Accuracy of Wrist-Worn Activity Monitors During Common Daily Physical Activities and Types of Structured Exercise: Evaluation StudyReddy, Ravi KondamaPooni, RubinZaharieva, Dessi PSenf, BrianEl Youssef, JosephDassau, EyalDoyle III, Francis JClements, Mark ARickels, Michael RPatton, Susana RCastle, Jessica RRiddell, Michael CJacobs, Peter G BackgroundWrist-worn activity monitors are often used to monitor heart rate (HR) and energy expenditure (EE) in a variety of settings including more recently in medical applications. The use of real-time physiological signals to inform medical systems including drug delivery systems and decision support systems will depend on the accuracy of the signals being measured, including accuracy of HR and EE. Prior studies assessed accuracy of wearables only during steady-state aerobic exercise. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to validate the accuracy of both HR and EE for 2 common wrist-worn devices during a variety of dynamic activities that represent various physical activities associated with daily living including structured exercise. MethodsWe assessed the accuracy of both HR and EE for two common wrist-worn devices (Fitbit Charge 2 and Garmin vívosmart HR+) during dynamic activities. Over a 2-day period, 20 healthy adults (age: mean 27.5 [SD 6.0] years; body mass index: mean 22.5 [SD 2.3] kg/m2; 11 females) performed a maximal oxygen uptake test, free-weight resistance circuit, interval training session, and activities of daily living. Validity was assessed using an HR chest strap (Polar) and portable indirect calorimetry (Cosmed). Accuracy of the commercial wearables versus research-grade standards was determined using Bland-Altman analysis, correlational analysis, and error bias. ResultsFitbit and Garmin were reasonably accurate at measuring HR but with an overall negative bias. There was more error observed during high-intensity activities when there was a lack of repetitive wrist motion and when the exercise mode indicator was not used. The Garmin estimated HR with a mean relative error (RE, %) of −3.3% (SD 16.7), whereas Fitbit estimated HR with an RE of −4.7% (SD 19.6) across all activities. The highest error was observed during high-intensity intervals on bike (Fitbit: −11.4% [SD 35.7]; Garmin: −14.3% [SD 20.5]) and lowest error during high-intensity intervals on treadmill (Fitbit: −1.7% [SD 11.5]; Garmin: −0.5% [SD 9.4]). Fitbit and Garmin EE estimates differed significantly, with Garmin having less negative bias (Fitbit: −19.3% [SD 28.9], Garmin: −1.6% [SD 30.6], P<.001) across all activities, and with both correlating poorly with indirect calorimetry measures. ConclusionsTwo common wrist-worn devices (Fitbit Charge 2 and Garmin vívosmart HR+) show good HR accuracy, with a small negative bias, and reasonable EE estimates during low to moderate-intensity exercise and during a variety of common daily activities and exercise. Accuracy was compromised markedly when the activity indicator was not used on the watch or when activities involving less wrist motion such as cycle ergometry were done.https://mhealth.jmir.org/2018/12/e10338/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Reddy, Ravi Kondama
Pooni, Rubin
Zaharieva, Dessi P
Senf, Brian
El Youssef, Joseph
Dassau, Eyal
Doyle III, Francis J
Clements, Mark A
Rickels, Michael R
Patton, Susana R
Castle, Jessica R
Riddell, Michael C
Jacobs, Peter G
spellingShingle Reddy, Ravi Kondama
Pooni, Rubin
Zaharieva, Dessi P
Senf, Brian
El Youssef, Joseph
Dassau, Eyal
Doyle III, Francis J
Clements, Mark A
Rickels, Michael R
Patton, Susana R
Castle, Jessica R
Riddell, Michael C
Jacobs, Peter G
Accuracy of Wrist-Worn Activity Monitors During Common Daily Physical Activities and Types of Structured Exercise: Evaluation Study
JMIR mHealth and uHealth
author_facet Reddy, Ravi Kondama
Pooni, Rubin
Zaharieva, Dessi P
Senf, Brian
El Youssef, Joseph
Dassau, Eyal
Doyle III, Francis J
Clements, Mark A
Rickels, Michael R
Patton, Susana R
Castle, Jessica R
Riddell, Michael C
Jacobs, Peter G
author_sort Reddy, Ravi Kondama
title Accuracy of Wrist-Worn Activity Monitors During Common Daily Physical Activities and Types of Structured Exercise: Evaluation Study
title_short Accuracy of Wrist-Worn Activity Monitors During Common Daily Physical Activities and Types of Structured Exercise: Evaluation Study
title_full Accuracy of Wrist-Worn Activity Monitors During Common Daily Physical Activities and Types of Structured Exercise: Evaluation Study
title_fullStr Accuracy of Wrist-Worn Activity Monitors During Common Daily Physical Activities and Types of Structured Exercise: Evaluation Study
title_full_unstemmed Accuracy of Wrist-Worn Activity Monitors During Common Daily Physical Activities and Types of Structured Exercise: Evaluation Study
title_sort accuracy of wrist-worn activity monitors during common daily physical activities and types of structured exercise: evaluation study
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR mHealth and uHealth
issn 2291-5222
publishDate 2018-12-01
description BackgroundWrist-worn activity monitors are often used to monitor heart rate (HR) and energy expenditure (EE) in a variety of settings including more recently in medical applications. The use of real-time physiological signals to inform medical systems including drug delivery systems and decision support systems will depend on the accuracy of the signals being measured, including accuracy of HR and EE. Prior studies assessed accuracy of wearables only during steady-state aerobic exercise. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to validate the accuracy of both HR and EE for 2 common wrist-worn devices during a variety of dynamic activities that represent various physical activities associated with daily living including structured exercise. MethodsWe assessed the accuracy of both HR and EE for two common wrist-worn devices (Fitbit Charge 2 and Garmin vívosmart HR+) during dynamic activities. Over a 2-day period, 20 healthy adults (age: mean 27.5 [SD 6.0] years; body mass index: mean 22.5 [SD 2.3] kg/m2; 11 females) performed a maximal oxygen uptake test, free-weight resistance circuit, interval training session, and activities of daily living. Validity was assessed using an HR chest strap (Polar) and portable indirect calorimetry (Cosmed). Accuracy of the commercial wearables versus research-grade standards was determined using Bland-Altman analysis, correlational analysis, and error bias. ResultsFitbit and Garmin were reasonably accurate at measuring HR but with an overall negative bias. There was more error observed during high-intensity activities when there was a lack of repetitive wrist motion and when the exercise mode indicator was not used. The Garmin estimated HR with a mean relative error (RE, %) of −3.3% (SD 16.7), whereas Fitbit estimated HR with an RE of −4.7% (SD 19.6) across all activities. The highest error was observed during high-intensity intervals on bike (Fitbit: −11.4% [SD 35.7]; Garmin: −14.3% [SD 20.5]) and lowest error during high-intensity intervals on treadmill (Fitbit: −1.7% [SD 11.5]; Garmin: −0.5% [SD 9.4]). Fitbit and Garmin EE estimates differed significantly, with Garmin having less negative bias (Fitbit: −19.3% [SD 28.9], Garmin: −1.6% [SD 30.6], P<.001) across all activities, and with both correlating poorly with indirect calorimetry measures. ConclusionsTwo common wrist-worn devices (Fitbit Charge 2 and Garmin vívosmart HR+) show good HR accuracy, with a small negative bias, and reasonable EE estimates during low to moderate-intensity exercise and during a variety of common daily activities and exercise. Accuracy was compromised markedly when the activity indicator was not used on the watch or when activities involving less wrist motion such as cycle ergometry were done.
url https://mhealth.jmir.org/2018/12/e10338/
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