Validation of gait characteristics extracted from raw accelerometry during walking against measures of physical function, mobility, fatigability, and fitness
Jacek K. Urbanek, Vadim Zipunnikov, Tamara Harris, Ciprian, Crainiceanu, Jaroslaw Harezlak, Nancy W. Glynn

TL;DR
This study validates that accelerometry-derived walking features from both lab and free-living environments are significantly associated with physical function, mobility, fatigability, and fitness in older adults, supporting their use in health assessment.
Contribution
It introduces a method to extract and validate walking features from accelerometry data that correlate with health measures in older adults.
Findings
Micro-scale walking features are associated with physical health metrics.
In-the-lab and in-the-wild data show consistent associations.
Walking acceleration inversely correlates with physical function and fitness.
Abstract
Background. Wearable accelerometry devices allow collection of high-density activity data in large epidemiological studies both in-the-lab as well as in-the-wild (free-living). Such data can be used to detect and identify periods of sustained harmonic walking. This report aims to establish whether the micro- and macro-features of walking identified in the laboratory and free-living environments are associated with measures of physical function, mobility, fatigability, and fitness. Methods. Fifty-one older adults (median age 77.5) enrolled in the Developmental Epidemiologic Cohort Study in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania were included in the analyses. The study included an in-the-lab component as well as 7 days of monitoring in-the-wild. Participants were equipped with hip-worn Actigraph GT3X+ activity monitors, which collect high-density raw accelerometry data. We applied a walking…
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