Why Are Children Different in Their Daily Sedentariness? An Approach Based on the Mixed-Effects Location Scale Model.

This study aimed to investigate the between- and within-individual variability in sedentary time over seven days, using a mixed-effects location scale model. The sample comprised 686 Portuguese children (381 girls) aged 9-11 years, from 23 schools. Sedentary time was estimated by the Actigraph GT3X+...

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Main Authors: Thayse Natacha Gomes, Donald Hedeker, Fernanda Karina dos Santos, Sara Pereira, Peter T Katzmarzyk, José A R Maia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4521850?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-fc7b105b1b1c4d7196fcd905399591652020-11-24T21:52:04ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01107e013219210.1371/journal.pone.0132192Why Are Children Different in Their Daily Sedentariness? An Approach Based on the Mixed-Effects Location Scale Model.Thayse Natacha GomesDonald HedekerFernanda Karina dos SantosSara PereiraPeter T KatzmarzykJosé A R MaiaThis study aimed to investigate the between- and within-individual variability in sedentary time over seven days, using a mixed-effects location scale model. The sample comprised 686 Portuguese children (381 girls) aged 9-11 years, from 23 schools. Sedentary time was estimated by the Actigraph GT3X+ accelerometer, which was used 24 hours/day for 7 consecutive days; height, sitting height, and weight were measured, BMI was computed (WHO cut-points were used to classify subjects as normal weight or overweight/obese), and maturity offset was estimated. Information regarding the home environment was obtained by questionnaire. Results revealed that (i) children were more sedentary on Friday, but less so on Saturday and Sunday (compared to Monday), with significant variation between- and within-subjects (between-subject variance=0.800, within-subject variance=1.793, intra-subject correlation=0.308); (ii) there is a sex effect on sedentariness, with boys being less sedentary than girls (p<0.001), and the between-subject variance was 1.48 times larger for boys than girls; (iii) in terms of the within-subject variance, or erraticism, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday have similar erraticism levels as Monday (Thursday has less, while Saturday and Sunday have more); in addition, girls (variance ratio=0.632, p<0.001), overweight/obese children (variance ratio=0.861, p=0.019), and those later mature (variance ratio=0.849, p=0.013) have less erraticism than their counterparts; (iv) the within-subject variance varied significantly across subjects (scale std dev=0.342±0.037, p<0.001); and (v) in the fixed part of the model, only biological maturation was positively related to sedentariness. This study demonstrated that there is significant between- and within-subject variability in sedentariness across a whole week. This implies that a focus on intra-individual variability, instead of only on mean values, would provide relevant information towards a more complete map of children's sedentary behaviour, which can be helpful when developing more efficient strategies to reduce sedentariness.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4521850?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thayse Natacha Gomes
Donald Hedeker
Fernanda Karina dos Santos
Sara Pereira
Peter T Katzmarzyk
José A R Maia
spellingShingle Thayse Natacha Gomes
Donald Hedeker
Fernanda Karina dos Santos
Sara Pereira
Peter T Katzmarzyk
José A R Maia
Why Are Children Different in Their Daily Sedentariness? An Approach Based on the Mixed-Effects Location Scale Model.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Thayse Natacha Gomes
Donald Hedeker
Fernanda Karina dos Santos
Sara Pereira
Peter T Katzmarzyk
José A R Maia
author_sort Thayse Natacha Gomes
title Why Are Children Different in Their Daily Sedentariness? An Approach Based on the Mixed-Effects Location Scale Model.
title_short Why Are Children Different in Their Daily Sedentariness? An Approach Based on the Mixed-Effects Location Scale Model.
title_full Why Are Children Different in Their Daily Sedentariness? An Approach Based on the Mixed-Effects Location Scale Model.
title_fullStr Why Are Children Different in Their Daily Sedentariness? An Approach Based on the Mixed-Effects Location Scale Model.
title_full_unstemmed Why Are Children Different in Their Daily Sedentariness? An Approach Based on the Mixed-Effects Location Scale Model.
title_sort why are children different in their daily sedentariness? an approach based on the mixed-effects location scale model.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description This study aimed to investigate the between- and within-individual variability in sedentary time over seven days, using a mixed-effects location scale model. The sample comprised 686 Portuguese children (381 girls) aged 9-11 years, from 23 schools. Sedentary time was estimated by the Actigraph GT3X+ accelerometer, which was used 24 hours/day for 7 consecutive days; height, sitting height, and weight were measured, BMI was computed (WHO cut-points were used to classify subjects as normal weight or overweight/obese), and maturity offset was estimated. Information regarding the home environment was obtained by questionnaire. Results revealed that (i) children were more sedentary on Friday, but less so on Saturday and Sunday (compared to Monday), with significant variation between- and within-subjects (between-subject variance=0.800, within-subject variance=1.793, intra-subject correlation=0.308); (ii) there is a sex effect on sedentariness, with boys being less sedentary than girls (p<0.001), and the between-subject variance was 1.48 times larger for boys than girls; (iii) in terms of the within-subject variance, or erraticism, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday have similar erraticism levels as Monday (Thursday has less, while Saturday and Sunday have more); in addition, girls (variance ratio=0.632, p<0.001), overweight/obese children (variance ratio=0.861, p=0.019), and those later mature (variance ratio=0.849, p=0.013) have less erraticism than their counterparts; (iv) the within-subject variance varied significantly across subjects (scale std dev=0.342±0.037, p<0.001); and (v) in the fixed part of the model, only biological maturation was positively related to sedentariness. This study demonstrated that there is significant between- and within-subject variability in sedentariness across a whole week. This implies that a focus on intra-individual variability, instead of only on mean values, would provide relevant information towards a more complete map of children's sedentary behaviour, which can be helpful when developing more efficient strategies to reduce sedentariness.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4521850?pdf=render
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