Abstract

BackgroundOptical measurement techniques and recent advances in wearable technology have made heart rate (HR) sensing simpler and more affordable.ObjectivesThe Polar OH1 is an arm worn optical heart rate monitor. The objectives of this study are two-fold; 1) to validate the OH1 optical HR sensor with the gold standard of HR measurement, electrocardiography (ECG), over a range of moderate to high intensity physical activities, 2) to validate wearing the OH1 at the temple as an alternative location to its recommended wearing location around the forearm and upper arm.MethodsTwenty-four individuals participated in a physical exercise protocol, by walking on a treadmill and riding a stationary spin bike at different speeds while the criterion measure, ECG and Polar OH1 HR were recorded simultaneously at three different body locations; forearm, upper arm and the temple. Time synchronised HR data points were compared using Bland-Altman analyses and intraclass correlation.ResultsThe intraclass correlation between the ECG and Polar OH1, for the aggregated data, was 0.99 and the estimated mean bias ranged 0.27–0.33 bpm for the sensor locations. The three sensors exhibited a 95% limit of agreement (LoA: forearm 5.22, -4.68 bpm; upper arm 5.15, -4.49; temple 5.22, -4.66). The mean of the ECG HR for the aggregated data was 112.15 ± 24.52 bpm. The intraclass correlation of HR values below and above this mean were 0.98 and 0.99 respectively. The reported mean bias ranged 0.38–0.47 bpm (95% LoA: forearm 6.14, -5.38 bpm; upper arm 6.07, -5.13 bpm; temple 6.09, -5.31 bpm), and 0.15–0.16 bpm (95% LoA: forearm 3.99, -3.69 bpm; upper arm 3.90, -3.58 bpm; temple 4.06, -3.76 bpm) respectively. During different exercise intensities, the intraclass correlation ranged 0.95–0.99 for the three sensor locations. During the entire protocol, the estimated mean bias was in the range -0.15–0.55 bpm, 0.01–0.53 bpm and -0.37–0.48 bpm, for the forearm, upper arm and temple locations respectively. The corresponding upper limits of 95% LoA were 3.22–7.03 bpm, 3.25–6.82 bpm and 3.18–7.04 bpm while the lower limits of 95% LoA were -6.36–(-2.35) bpm, -6.46–(-2.30) bpm and -7.42–(-2.41) bpm.ConclusionPolar OH1 demonstrates high level of agreement with the criterion measure ECG HR, thus can be used as a valid measure of HR in lab and field settings during moderate and high intensity physical activities.

Highlights

  • heart rate (HR) is one of the key metrics that can show and track human physical activity levels

  • Though a plethora of HR monitors exists, it is worth noting that when considering them for real-life or out-oflaboratory scenarios, ease of wearability, less cumbersomeness, comfort and data accessibility are among many factors that influence their user acceptance

  • Both the treadmill and spin bike exercise sessions with varying physical load and rest/recovery intervals were aggregated in the analysis, which produced n = 25858 data points

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Summary

Introduction

HR is modulated by physical activities and by affective and cognitive states including cognitive load, stress, anxiety, fatigue and many other factors such as sleep, nutrition, illness, meditation and caffeine intake It is considered a vital physiological measure that can be relied upon for assessing human performance in real-life scenarios across different application domains such as health and wellbeing, emergency services, sports and training [1, 2]. Though a plethora of HR monitors exists, it is worth noting that when considering them for real-life or out-oflaboratory scenarios, ease of wearability, less cumbersomeness, comfort and data accessibility are among many factors that influence their user acceptance Another vital factor is the accuracy of HR measurements, as inaccurate data measurements affect their ability to deduce robust conclusions for many applications. Editor: Daniel Boullosa, James Cook University College of Healthcare Sciences, BRAZIL

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