[go: up one dir, main page]

loading
Papers Papers/2022 Papers Papers/2022

Research.Publish.Connect.

Paper

Paper Unlock

Authors: Jasmijn Franke 1 ; 2 ; Christiane Grünloh 1 ; 2 ; Dennis Hofs 1 ; Boris Van Schooten 1 ; Andreea Bondrea 1 and Miriam Cabrita 1 ; 2 ; 3

Affiliations: 1 eHealth Group, Roessingh Research and Development, Enschede, The Netherlands ; 2 Biomedical Signals and Systems Group, University of Twente, Enschede, The Netherlands ; 3 Innovation Sprint Sprl, Brussels, Belgium

Keyword(s): Physical Activity, Sedentary Periods, Sedentary Bouts, Inactive Periods, Inactive Bouts, Virtual Coach, Coaching, Embodied Conversational Agent, mHealth, eHealth.

Abstract: Office workers often lead sedentary lifestyles, a lifestyle responsible for higher risks of cardiovascular disease, stroke, diabetes and premature mortality. Improvements towards a more active lifestyle reduce cardiovascular risks and thus changing the sedentary lifestyle might prevent chronic illness. The Recurring Sedentary Period Detection (RSPD) algorithm described in this paper was designed to identify recurring sedentary periods using data from an activity tracker, summarise the sedentary periods and pinpoint notification times at which the user should be motivated to get some movement. The outcome of the RSPD algorithm was validated using data from a 10-week period of one typical office worker. Our results show that the RSPD algorithm could correctly identify the recurring sedentary periods, compute fitting daily summaries and pinpoint the notification times correctly. With minor differences, the RSPD algorithm was successfully implemented in the healthyMe smartphone applicati on, one of the supporting services of the SMARTWORK project. Within the healthyMe application, an embodied virtual agent is used to communicate the daily summaries and motivate the user to move more at the identified notification times. Pilots planned as part of the SMARTWORK project will evaluate whether the RSPD algorithm helps to motivate office workers to break up sedentary periods. (More)

CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

Sign In Guest: Register as new SciTePress user now for free.

Sign In SciTePress user: please login.

PDF ImageMy Papers

You are not signed in, therefore limits apply to your IP address 142.171.178.55

In the current month:
Recent papers: 100 available of 100 total
2+ years older papers: 200 available of 200 total

Paper citation in several formats:
Franke, J.; Grünloh, C.; Hofs, D.; Van Schooten, B.; Bondrea, A. and Cabrita, M. (2021). Breaking up Long Sedentary Periods of Office Workers through a Virtual Coach using Activity Data. In Proceedings of the 13th International Joint Conference on Computational Intelligence - SmartWork; ISBN 978-989-758-534-0; ISSN 2184-3236, SciTePress, pages 389-397. DOI: 10.5220/0010721100003063

@conference{smartwork21,
author={Jasmijn Franke. and Christiane Grünloh. and Dennis Hofs. and Boris {Van Schooten}. and Andreea Bondrea. and Miriam Cabrita.},
title={Breaking up Long Sedentary Periods of Office Workers through a Virtual Coach using Activity Data},
booktitle={Proceedings of the 13th International Joint Conference on Computational Intelligence - SmartWork},
year={2021},
pages={389-397},
publisher={SciTePress},
organization={INSTICC},
doi={10.5220/0010721100003063},
isbn={978-989-758-534-0},
issn={2184-3236},
}

TY - CONF

JO - Proceedings of the 13th International Joint Conference on Computational Intelligence - SmartWork
TI - Breaking up Long Sedentary Periods of Office Workers through a Virtual Coach using Activity Data
SN - 978-989-758-534-0
IS - 2184-3236
AU - Franke, J.
AU - Grünloh, C.
AU - Hofs, D.
AU - Van Schooten, B.
AU - Bondrea, A.
AU - Cabrita, M.
PY - 2021
SP - 389
EP - 397
DO - 10.5220/0010721100003063
PB - SciTePress