A Statistical Method and Tool to Account for Indirect Calorimetry Differential Measurement Error in a Single-Subject Analysis

Indirect calorimetry and oxygen consumption (VO2) are accepted tools in human physiology research. It has been shown that indirect calorimetry systems exhibit differential measurement error, where the error of a device is systematically different depending on the volume of gas flow. Moreover, syst...

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Main Author: Matthew S Tenan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Physiology
Subjects:
VO2
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fphys.2016.00172/full
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spelling doaj-fa9251352fd94738ba0820a64b0ff3c22020-11-25T00:32:12ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Physiology1664-042X2016-05-01710.3389/fphys.2016.00172198636A Statistical Method and Tool to Account for Indirect Calorimetry Differential Measurement Error in a Single-Subject AnalysisMatthew S Tenan0U.S. Army Research LaboratoryIndirect calorimetry and oxygen consumption (VO2) are accepted tools in human physiology research. It has been shown that indirect calorimetry systems exhibit differential measurement error, where the error of a device is systematically different depending on the volume of gas flow. Moreover, systems commonly report multiple decimal places of precision, giving the clinician a false sense of device accuracy. The purpose of this manuscript is to demonstrate the use of a novel statistical tool which models the reliability of two specific indirect calorimetry systems, Douglas bag and Parvomedics 2400 TrueOne, as univariate normal distributions and implements the distribution overlapping coefficient to determine the likelihood that two VO2 measures are the same. A command line implementation of the tool is available for the R programming language as well as a web-based graphical user interface. This tool is valuable for clinicians performing a single-subject analysis as well as researchers interested in determining if their observed differences exceed the error of the device.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fphys.2016.00172/fullindirect calorimetryResearch Methodsexercise testingcost of transportVO2
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthew S Tenan
spellingShingle Matthew S Tenan
A Statistical Method and Tool to Account for Indirect Calorimetry Differential Measurement Error in a Single-Subject Analysis
Frontiers in Physiology
indirect calorimetry
Research Methods
exercise testing
cost of transport
VO2
author_facet Matthew S Tenan
author_sort Matthew S Tenan
title A Statistical Method and Tool to Account for Indirect Calorimetry Differential Measurement Error in a Single-Subject Analysis
title_short A Statistical Method and Tool to Account for Indirect Calorimetry Differential Measurement Error in a Single-Subject Analysis
title_full A Statistical Method and Tool to Account for Indirect Calorimetry Differential Measurement Error in a Single-Subject Analysis
title_fullStr A Statistical Method and Tool to Account for Indirect Calorimetry Differential Measurement Error in a Single-Subject Analysis
title_full_unstemmed A Statistical Method and Tool to Account for Indirect Calorimetry Differential Measurement Error in a Single-Subject Analysis
title_sort statistical method and tool to account for indirect calorimetry differential measurement error in a single-subject analysis
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Physiology
issn 1664-042X
publishDate 2016-05-01
description Indirect calorimetry and oxygen consumption (VO2) are accepted tools in human physiology research. It has been shown that indirect calorimetry systems exhibit differential measurement error, where the error of a device is systematically different depending on the volume of gas flow. Moreover, systems commonly report multiple decimal places of precision, giving the clinician a false sense of device accuracy. The purpose of this manuscript is to demonstrate the use of a novel statistical tool which models the reliability of two specific indirect calorimetry systems, Douglas bag and Parvomedics 2400 TrueOne, as univariate normal distributions and implements the distribution overlapping coefficient to determine the likelihood that two VO2 measures are the same. A command line implementation of the tool is available for the R programming language as well as a web-based graphical user interface. This tool is valuable for clinicians performing a single-subject analysis as well as researchers interested in determining if their observed differences exceed the error of the device.
topic indirect calorimetry
Research Methods
exercise testing
cost of transport
VO2
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fphys.2016.00172/full
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