Are Currently Available Wearable Devices for Activity Tracking and Heart Rate Monitoring Accurate, Precise, and Medically Beneficial?

Fatema El-Amrawy, Mohamed Ismail Nounou, Fatema El-Amrawy, Mohamed Ismail Nounou

Abstract

Objectives: The new wave of wireless technologies, fitness trackers, and body sensor devices can have great impact on healthcare systems and the quality of life. However, there have not been enough studies to prove the accuracy and precision of these trackers. The objective of this study was to evaluate the accuracy, precision, and overall performance of seventeen wearable devices currently available compared with direct observation of step counts and heart rate monitoring.

Methods: Each participant in this study used three accelerometers at a time, running the three corresponding applications of each tracker on an Android or iOS device simultaneously. Each participant was instructed to walk 200, 500, and 1,000 steps. Each set was repeated 40 times. Data was recorded after each trial, and the mean step count, standard deviation, accuracy, and precision were estimated for each tracker. Heart rate was measured by all trackers (if applicable), which support heart rate monitoring, and compared to a positive control, the Onyx Vantage 9590 professional clinical pulse oximeter.

Results: The accuracy of the tested products ranged between 79.8% and 99.1%, while the coefficient of variation (precision) ranged between 4% and 17.5%. MisFit Shine showed the highest accuracy and precision (along with Qualcomm Toq), while Samsung Gear 2 showed the lowest accuracy, and Jawbone UP showed the lowest precision. However, Xiaomi Mi band showed the best package compared to its price.

Conclusions: The accuracy and precision of the selected fitness trackers are reasonable and can indicate the average level of activity and thus average energy expenditure.

Keywords: Accuracy; Fitness Trackers; Heart Rate; Precision; Step Counting.

Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest: No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.

Figures

Figure 1. Numbers of steps calculated by…
Figure 1. Numbers of steps calculated by the trackers against numbers of steps counted by the observer indicating the accuracy of each tracker. The error bars indicate ±1 standard deviation.
Figure 2. Heart rate measurements (bpm) of…
Figure 2. Heart rate measurements (bpm) of various trackers against the Onyx Vantage 9590 as a positive control.

References

    1. McGrath MJ, Scanaill CN. Wellness, fitness, and lifestyle sensing application. In: McGrath MJ, Scanaill CN, editors. Sensor technologies: healthcare, wellness, and environmental application. New York (NY): Apress Media; 2013. pp. 217–248.
    1. Alger K. Wearable technology is revolutionizing fitness [Internet] London: Raconteur; 2014. [cited at 2015 Oct 1]. Available from: .
    1. Jeon E, Park HA. Factors affecting acceptance of smartphone application for management of obesity. Healthc Inform Res. 2015;21(2):74–82.
    1. Jeon E, Park HA. Development of a smartphone application for clinical-guideline-based obesity management. Healthc Inform Res. 2015;21(1):10–20.
    1. Wagenaar RC, Sapir I, Zhang Y, Markovic S, Vaina LM, Little TD. Continuous monitoring of functional activities using wearable, wireless gyroscope and accelerometer technology. Conf Proc IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc. 2011;2011:4844–4847.
    1. Yilmaz T, Foster R, Hao Y. Detecting vital signs with wearable wireless sensors. Sensors. 2010;10(12):10837–10862.
    1. Prisacariu VA, Reid I. 3D hand tracking for human computer interaction. Image Vis Comput. 2012;30(3):236–250.
    1. Duffy J. Best fitness trackers for 2015 [Internet] New York (NY): ; 2015. [cited at 2015 Oct 1]. Available from: .
    1. Profis S. Do wristband heart trackers actually work? A checkup [Internet] San Francisco (CA): CNET; 2014. [cited at 2015 Oct 1]. Available from:
    1. Stein S. Garmin Vivofit review: long battery life in a fitness band, no charger needed [Internet] San Francisco (CA): CNET; 2014. [cited at 2015 Oct 1]. Available from:
    1. Garmin Connect Mobile application [Internet] Mountain View (CA): Google Play; 2014. [cited at 2015 Oct 1]. Available from: .
    1. Poh MZ, McDuff DJ, Picard RW. Non-contact, automated cardiac pulse measurements using video imaging and blind source separation. Opt Express. 2010;18(10):10762–10774.
    1. Chan M, Esteve D, Fourniols JY, Escriba C, Campo E. Smart wearable systems: current status and future challenges. Artif Intell Med. 2012;56(3):137–156.
    1. Darwish A, Hassanien AE. Wearable and implantable wireless sensor network solutions for healthcare monitoring. Sensors (Basel) 2011;11(6):5561–5595.
    1. Patel MS, Asch DA, Volpp KG. Wearable devices as facilitators, not drivers, of health behavior change. JAMA. 2015;313(5):459–460.
    1. Bravata DM, Smith-Spangler C, Sundaram V, Gienger AL, Lin N, Lewis R, et al. Using pedometers to increase physical activity and improve health: a systematic review. JAMA. 2007;298(19):2296–2304.
    1. Case MA, Burwick HA, Volpp KG, Patel MS. Accuracy of smartphone applications and wearable devices for tracking physical activity data. JAMA. 2015;313(6):625–626.
    1. Taylor B. 26 Fitness trackers ranked from worst to first [Internet] New York (NY): Time Inc.; 2014. [cited at 2015 Oct 1]. Available from:

Source: PubMed

3
Předplatit