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Is this specific person more active in the morning or in the afternoon? Are children more active during their work hours or their leisure time? How much inactivity occurs at work in office workers? Questions like these can be answered with GGIR but you first have to specify a few parameters.
The main input argument to be specified is qwindow
,
which can be used the following ways:
In the following sections I will discuss both scenarios.
To perform clock hour segmentation, you will need to provide function
GGIR with argument qwindow
and assign it a numeric vector
with the hours for the segmentation. If the start and end of the day,
are not explicitly provided in the vector GGIR will add them. Please
find below some example values for qwindow
. The number of
values used by qwindow
is unlimited, but be aware that some
of the analyses are such as MX-metrics are impossible for very small
windows and will produce empty results.
qwindow value | Resulting segment(s) to be analysed |
---|---|
c(0,24) | midnight to following midnight (24 hours), the full day is the only segment. |
c(8,24) | midnight-8:00 (8 hour segment), 8:00-midnight (16 hour segment), and midnight-midnight (24 hour segment). |
c(6,11, 13, 17) | midnight-6:00 (6 hour segment), 6:00-11:00 (5 hour segment), 11:00-13:00 (2 hour segment), 13:00-17:00 (4 hour segment), 17:00-midnight (7 hour segment), and midnight-midnight (24 hour segment). |
c(0:24) | 25 segments: 24 segments of 1 hour corresponding to each hour of the day, and midnight-midnight (24 hour segment). |
Day Saving Time (DST) is taken into account when identifying the start of the day, but not when identifying the day segments. In other words, a 23 hour days is processed as the 24 hours after the first midnight. This to ensure that segment length is identical across days of the week, which is needed to ease comparison of outcome variables across days.
To perform activity-log based segmentation, you will need to provide
function GGIR
with argument qwindow
and assign
it the full path to your activity log in .csv format
,
e.g. qwindow="C:/myactivitylog.csv"
.
The activity log is expected to be a .csv-file with the following structure:
ID | date | work | travelhome | home | date | work | travelhome | home |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1234 | 04-11-20 | 7:45:00 | 17:00:00 | 17:30:00 | 05-11-20 | 17:30:00 | ||
4567 | 24-11-20 | 7:45:00 | 17:00:00 | 17:30:00 | 25-11-20 | 7:45:00 | 17:00:00 | 17:30:00 |
Rows: First row represents the column headers after which each row represents one accelerometer recording.
ID-column: The first column is expected to hold the
recording ID, which needs to match with the ID GGIR extracts from the
accelerometer file. If unsure how to format the ID values, apply GGIR to
a sample of your accelerometer files using the default argument
settings. The ID column in the generated part 2 .csv reports will show
how the participant ID is extracted by GGIR. If no ID is extracted, see
documentation for argument idloc
, which helps you to
specify the location of the participant in the file name or file header.
If ID extraction fails the accelerometer files cannot be matched with
the corresponding activity log entries.
Date-column: The ID column is followed by a date
column for the first log day. To ensure GGIR recognises this date
correctly, specify argument qwindow_dateformat
. The default
format is "\%d-\%m-\%Y"
as in 23-2-2021 to indicate the
23rd of February 2021. If your date is formatted as 2-23-21 then
specify"\%m-\%d-\%y"
. The column name of the date column
needs to include the character combination “date” or “Date” or “DATE”.
Use the same date format consistently throughout your activity
diary.
Start-times: The date column is followed by one or multiple columns with start times for the activity types in that day format in hours:minutes:seconds. Do not provide dates in these cells. The header of the column will be used as label for each activity type. Insert a new date column before continuing with activity types for next day. Leave missing values empty.
Missing values: If values are missing the preceding
and succeeding time point will be used as the edges of the segment. In
the example below this means that we will define a segment from
A-C
for ID 1234
, while for ID
6789
we only defined segments A-B
and
B-C
, segment A-C
is not derived here.
ID | date | A | B | C |
---|---|---|---|---|
1234 | 04-11-20 | 7:45:00 | 17:30:00 | |
6789 | 24-11-20 | 7:45:00 | 13:00:00 | 17:30:00 |
Notes: - If an activity log was collected for some individuals then those will be processed with qwindow value c(0,24). - Dates with no activity log data can be skipped, no need to have a column with the date followed by a column with the next date. - The end time of one activity is assumed to be the start time of the next activity. We currently do not facilitate overlapping time segments.
Both approaches are implemented in GGIR part 2 and part 5. Therefore
the specific output variables that are calculated both in part 2 and 5
are available per day, per person, and per segment of the day based on
the argument qwindow
Note that qwindow
is only
used in part 5 when timewindow
includes
"MM"
(see specific documentation for
timewindow
} in the parameters
vignette)
At the moment, specifying the argument qwindow
triggers
the calculation of the qwindow
segments both in part 2 and
part 5, which may result in a longer time to finish the analysis. If
only interested in the segments in either part 2 or part 5, an option
might be to run GGIR parts 1:2 with the argument qwindow
of
interest, and then set qwindow = NULL
and run GGIR parts
3:5 (or vice versa: qwindow = NULL
for GGIR parts 1:2, and
then the desired qwindow
segments when running GGIR parts
3:5).
For more information about the output variables calculated in each part of the pipeline, see the main GGIR vignette.
For more information about how to use the GGIR function call see explanation in the main GGIR vignette.
library("GGIR")
GGIR(datadir = "/your/data/directory",
outputdir = "/your/output/directory",
mode = 1:5, # <= run GGIR parts 1 to 5
do.report = c(2, 5), # <= generate csv-report for GGIR part 2 and part 5
qwindow = c(0, 6, 12, 18, 24),
timewindow = "MM")
library("GGIR")
GGIR(datadir = "/your/data/directory",
outputdir = "/your/output/directory",
mode = 1:5, # <= run GGIR parts 1 to 5
do.report = c(2, 5), # <= generate csv-report for GGIR part 2 and part 5
qwindow = "/path/to/your/activity/log.csv",
timewindow = "MM")
After running this code GGIR creates an output folder in the output
directory as specified with argument outputdir. In the subfolder
results
you will then find csv files with the reports
generated in part 2 and part 5 of the pipeline:
Part 2
part2_summary.csv
the recording level summary, with 1
row per recording and in recording level aggregates of day segments in
columns.part2_daysummary.csv
the day level summary, with 1 row
per day and day segment specific outcomes in columns.part2_daysummary_longformat.csv
the day level summary
in long format, such that each row represents one segment from one day
in one recording.In both part2_summary.csv
and
part2_daysummary.csv
the column names tell you the day
segment they correspond to. For example, column names ending with
_18-24hr
refer to the time segment 18:00-24:00. In
part2_daysummary_longformat.csv
the time segment is
clarified via columns qwindow_timestamps and qwindow_name.
Part 5
In part 5, information about the segments of the days are exported in different csv reports than the person-level and day-level summaries. These files include the word “Segments” in the filename and are provided in the long format and aggregated per day and per person:
part5_daysummary_Segments[...].csv
the day level
summary in long format, such that each row represents one segment from
one day in one recording.part5_personsummary_Segments[...].csv
the recording
level summary in long format, such that each row represents the average
for each outcome in one specific segments across all days in which that
segment is available per participant.In part 5, the analyses performed per segment of the day come with
the possibility to clean the reports based on the information available
in the segments. The users can select to include only those segments
with a given amount of wear time during the segment
(segmentWEARcrit.part5
), as well as with a given awake time
or sleep period time in the segment
(segmentDAYSPTcrit.part5
).
These arguments are likely to be critical for a meaningful analysis of the data. The presence of sleep in a segment with physical activity will bias physical inactivity estimates and the presence of physical activity in a segment with sleep will bias sleep estimates. It will then become impossible to quantify whether it was the lack of one or the presence of the other behaviour that drives the association with for example a health outcome.
The analyses that GGIR per segment of the day, include:
Acceleration distribution (in part 2): Derived if
argument ilevels
is specified. You will find these under
the variable names such as [0,36)_ENMO_mg
which means time
spent between 0 and 36 mg defined by acceleration metric ENMO.
Number of valid hours of data (in part 2): You will
recognise these as N_valid_hours_in_window
which tells you
the number of valid hours per time window, and
N_valid_hours
which is the number of valid hours per
day.
Non-wear time percentage (in part 5):
nonwear_day_perc
, nonwear_spt_perc
, and
nonwear_day_spt_perc
tell you the proportion of the segment
classified as non-wear during awake time (day) and during sleep period
time (spt).
LXMX analysis (in part 2 and part5): LXMX analysis,
which stands for least and most active X hours of the segment. You will
recognise these variable names like L5hr_ENMO_mg
which is
the start time of the least active five hours defined by metric ENMO,
and L5_ENMO_mg
which is the average acceleration for those
hours.
Intensity gradient analysis (in part 2 and part 5):
You will find these as variables that start with
ig_gradient_
See description
of GGIR part 2 output in the main GGIR vignette for further details.
Time spent in Moderate or Vigorous Physical Activity (MVPA)
(in part 2 and part 5): You will find these as variables such
as MVPA_E5S_T201_ENMO
or
MVPA_E5S_B1M80%_T201_ENMO
. See description
of GGIR part 2 output in the main GGIR vignette for further details.
Time spent in sleeping, in inactivity and physical activity intensities (part 5): You will find these variables in the part 5 reports, in their bouted, unbouted, and total time version of the variables. See description of GGIR part 5 output in the main GGIR vignette for further details.
These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.
Health stats visible at Monitor.