Validity of the Acti4 method for detection of physical activity types in free-living settings: comparison with video analysis

This study examined the ability of the Acti4 software for identifying physical activity types from accelerometers during free-living with different levels of movement complexity compared with video observations. Nineteen aircraft cabin cleaners with ActiGraph GT3X+ accelerometer at the thigh and hip performed one semi-standardised and two non-standardised sessions (outside and inside aircraft) with different levels of movement complexity during working hours. The sensitivity for identifying different activity types was 75.4–99.4% for the semi-standardised session, 54.6–98.5% outside the aircraft and 49.9–90.2% inside the aircraft. The specificity was above 90% for all activities, except 'moving' inside the aircraft. These findings indicate that Acti4 provides good estimates of time spent in different activity types during semi-standardised conditions, and for sitting, standing and walking during non-standardised conditions with normal level of movement complexity. The Acti4 software may be a useful tool for researchers and practitioners in the field of ergonomics, occupational and public health.

The complete article "Validity of the Acti4 method for detection of physical activity types in free-living settings: comparison with video analysis" can be downloaded at the website of the Journal "Ergonomics", Volume 58, Issue 6, pp. 953-965 (charges may apply).

Bibliographic information

Title:  Validity of the Acti4 method for detection of physical activity types in free-living settings: comparison with video analysis. 

Written by:  I. Stemland, J. Ingebrigtsen, C. S. Christiansen, B. R. Jensen, C. Hanisch, J. Skotte, A. Holtermann

in: Ergonomics, Volume 58, Issue 6, 2015.  pages: 953-965, Project number: F 2282, DOI: 10.1080/00140139.2014.998724

Research Project

Project numberF 2282 StatusCompleted Project Investigation of stress-relations between physical load and physiological responses/morbidity

To the Project

Research completed