4.6 Article

Measurement of neighborhood-based physical activity bouts

Journal

HEALTH & PLACE
Volume 70, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.healthplace.2021.102595

Keywords

Accelerometry; Geographic information systems; GPS; Neighborhood; Physical activity

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01AG042176]

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This study found that different buffer types and sizes, as well as how GPS activity bouts are allocated within neighborhood buffers, can result in substantial variations in objectively measured neighborhood physical activity.
This study examined how buffer type (shape), size, and the allocation of activity bouts inside buffers that delineate the neighborhood spatially produce different estimates of neighborhood-based physical activity. A sample of 375 adults wore a global positioning system (GPS) data logger and accelerometer over 2 weeks under free-living conditions. Analytically, the amount of neighborhood physical activity measured objectively varies substantially, not only due to buffer shape and size, but by how GPS-based activity bouts are identified with respect to containment within neighborhood buffers. To move the neighborhood-effects literature forward, it is critical to delineate the spatial extent of the neighborhood, given how different ways of measuring GPS-based activity containment will result in different levels of physical activity across different buffer types and sizes.

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