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Energy Expenditure Estimation in Children by Activity-specific Regressions, Random Forest and Regression Trees from Raw Accelerometer Data

Vetterli, Moritz. Energy Expenditure Estimation in Children by Activity-specific Regressions, Random Forest and Regression Trees from Raw Accelerometer Data. 2013, Master Thesis, University of Basel, Faculty of Medicine.

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Official URL: https://edoc.unibas.ch/63859/

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Abstract

The aim of the study was to compare activity-specific regressions (ASR), random forest (RFEE) and regression trees (treeEE) as methods to determine energy expenditure (EE) in children from raw accelerometer data.
41 children (age: 9.9 ± 2.2y) preformed the activities sitting, standing, walking, running, jumping, crawling, cycling and riding a scooter for 3.5 min., while 30Hz raw accelerations were collected with one tri-axial hip-accelerometer (ActigGraph GT3X) and EE was measured with a gas analyzer (Cortex MetaMax 3B). 42 different features were calculated over 1-s windows and evaluated according to their importance to predict EE.
The ASR accurately predicted the EE of six activities. The ASR-biases were for sitting, standing, walking and crawling within 0.17 MET. RFEE precisely estimated the EE of cycling, riding a scooter, jumping and running with biases of -0.18, -0.21, -0.57 and -0.29 MET, respectively. The treeEE accurately predicted the EE of running and cycling (bias: -0.17 and -0.38 MET).
The ASR predicted EE more accurately than RFEE or the treeEE. Using activity-specific information seems therefore to lead to more accurate results. ASR might therefore be preferred to assess EE in children with raw accelerometer data in the future.
KEYWORDS: ENERGY EXPENDITURE, RAW ACCELEROMETER DATA, CLASSIFICATION, CHILDREN, DATA MINING
Advisors:Hanssen, Henner
Faculties and Departments:03 Faculty of Medicine > Departement Sport, Bewegung und Gesundheit > Bereich Sport- und Bewegungsmedizin > Präventive Sportmedizin (Hanssen)
UniBasel Contributors:Hanssen, Henner
Item Type:Thesis
Thesis Subtype:Master Thesis
Thesis no:UNSPECIFIED
Thesis status:Complete
Last Modified:25 Apr 2018 04:31
Deposited On:24 Apr 2018 15:54

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