Abstract

BackgroundMachine learning techniques are increasingly being applied in health research. It is not clear how useful these approaches are for modeling continuous outcomes. Child quality of life is associated with parental socioeconomic status and physical activity and may be associated with aerobic fitness and strength. It is unclear whether diet or academic performance is associated with quality of life.ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to compare the predictive performance of machine learning techniques with that of linear regression in examining the extent to which continuous outcomes (physical activity, aerobic fitness, muscular strength, diet, and parental education) are predictive of academic performance and quality of life and whether academic performance and quality of life are associated.MethodsWe modeled data from children attending 9 schools in a quasi-experimental study. We split data randomly into training and validation sets. Curvilinear, nonlinear, and heteroscedastic variables were simulated to examine the performance of machine learning techniques compared to that of linear models, with and without imputation.ResultsWe included data for 1711 children. Regression models explained 24% of academic performance variance in the real complete-case validation set, and up to 15% in quality of life. While machine learning techniques explained high proportions of variance in training sets, in validation, machine learning techniques explained approximately 0% of academic performance and 3% to 8% of quality of life. With imputation, machine learning techniques improved to 15% for academic performance. Machine learning outperformed regression for simulated nonlinear and heteroscedastic variables. The best predictors of academic performance in adjusted models were the child’s mother having a master-level education (P<.001; β=1.98, 95% CI 0.25 to 3.71), increased television and computer use (P=.03; β=1.19, 95% CI 0.25 to 3.71), and dichotomized self-reported exercise (P=.001; β=2.47, 95% CI 1.08 to 3.87). For quality of life, self-reported exercise (P<.001; β=1.09, 95% CI 0.53 to 1.66) and increased television and computer use (P=.002; β=−0.95, 95% CI −1.55 to −0.36) were the best predictors. Adjusted academic performance was associated with quality of life (P=.02; β=0.12, 95% CI 0.02 to 0.22).ConclusionsLinear regression was less prone to overfitting and outperformed commonly used machine learning techniques. Imputation improved the performance of machine learning, but not sufficiently to outperform regression. Machine learning techniques outperformed linear regression for modeling nonlinear and heteroscedastic relationships and may be of use in such cases. Regression with splines performed almost as well in nonlinear modeling. Lifestyle variables, including physical exercise, television and computer use, and parental education are predictive of academic performance or quality of life. Academic performance is associated with quality of life after adjusting for lifestyle variables and may offer another promising intervention target to improve quality of life in children.

Highlights

  • MethodsIn trials and quasi-experimental designs, reported sample sizes range from less than 100 to several thousand [1]

  • Machine learning techniques improved to 15% for academic performance

  • Adjusted academic performance was associated with quality of life (P=.02; β=0.12, 95% CI 0.02 to 0.22)

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Summary

Introduction

MethodsIn trials and quasi-experimental designs, reported sample sizes range from less than 100 to several thousand [1]. Linear regression approaches are widely used for modeling continuous outcome data in such studies [2]. Machine learning techniques have yielded useful health classification models [7,8]. Few comparisons exist between machine learning techniques and linear regression for continuous outcomes in health data sets, and where such comparisons have been made, sample sizes have been small [10,11]. Machine learning techniques are increasingly being applied in health research. It is not clear how useful these approaches are for modeling continuous outcomes. Child quality of life is associated with parental socioeconomic status and physical activity and may be associated with aerobic fitness and strength It is unclear whether diet or academic performance is associated with quality of life

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