articleMedicine & Science in Sports & ExerciseAug 1, 2003Closed access

Validity of 10 Electronic Pedometers for Measuring Steps, Distance, and Energy Cost

University of Tennessee at Knoxville

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Methods

Ten subjects (33 +/- 12 yr) walked on a treadmill at various speeds (54, 67, 80, 94, and 107 m x min-1) for 5-min stages. Simultaneously, an investigator determined steps by a hand counter and energy expenditure (kcal) by indirect calorimetry. Each brand was measured on the right and left sides.

Results

Correlation coefficients between right and left sides exceeded 0.81 for all pedometers except OR (0.76) and SL345 (0.57). Most pedometers underestimated steps at 54 m x min-1, but accuracy for step counting improved at faster speeds. At 80 m x min-1 and above, six models (SK, OM, DW, KZ, NL, and WL) gave mean values that were within +/- 1% of actual steps. Six pedometers displayed the distance traveled. Most of them estimated mean distance to within +/- 10% at 80 m x min-1 but overestimated distance at slower speeds and underestimated distance at faster speeds. Eight pedometers displayed kilocalories, but except for KZ and NL, it is unclear whether this should reflect net or gross kilocalories. If one assumes they display net kilocalories, the general trend was an overestimation of kilocalories at every speed. If one assumes they display gross kilocalorie, then seven of the eight pedometers were accurate to within +/-30% at all speeds.

Citation impact

898
total citations
FWCI
9.89
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100%
References
13
Citations per year

Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Calorie
  • Energy expenditure
  • Mathematics
  • Treadmill
  • Animal science
  • Statistics
  • Physical activity
  • Preferred walking speed
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Affordable and clean energy
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