Abstract

ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to examine the convergent validity of the Actical and activPAL to measure sedentary behaviour (SB) and non-SB in preschoolers in a free-living environment. DesignA convenience sample of 49 preschoolers (22 boys; 4.0±0.5 years) from six early childhood centres in Auckland, New Zealand were included in data analysis. MethodsParticipants wore a hip-mounted Actical and a thigh-mounted activPAL accelerometer simultaneously during centre attendance for one day and data were collected in 15s epochs. Bland–Altman tests were used to assess differences in group mean minutes and percentage of time in (non-)SB between both monitors. Agreement between binary coded (SB vs. non-SB) 15s-by-15s Actical and activPAL data was evaluated by calculating percentage agreement and κ statistic. ResultsThe monitors were worn on average for 294.8±46.3min resulting in a total of 57,780 15s epochs. Bland–Altman tests suggested a small group mean difference in (non-)SB (1.3min; 0.1%) and a wide prediction interval (121.3min; 39.2%). No obvious systematic bias was observed in the Bland–Altman plot. Percentage agreement between the 15s-by-15s Actical and activPAL data of all participants was 73.0% (inter-child range: 36.8–93.8%). The κ statistic showed moderate agreement with a value of 0.46 (95% CI: 0.45–0.47). ConclusionsAlthough the group mean estimate of (non-)SB was similar between the Actical and activPAL, the output of both monitors cannot be considered convergent as meaningful random disagreement was found between both monitors.

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