Papailiou Athan, Sullivan Elinor, Cameron Judy L
Division of Reproductive Science, The Oregon National Primate Research Center, Beaverton, Oregon 97006, USA.
Am J Primatol. 2008 Feb;70(2):185-90. doi: 10.1002/ajp.20476.
There are large individual differences in the daily pattern and level of physical activity in humans and other species. As it is becoming apparent that activity plays an integral role in a number of physiological processes including arousal, attention, cardiovascular health and body weight regulation, there is an increased interest in quantifying activity. Nonhuman primates are particularly useful experimental models for such studies in that they exhibit a repertoire of activity more similar to humans than the activity of animals such as rodents and domestic animals. Recent studies measuring activity in nonhuman primates have used omnidirectional accelerometers, often worn on collars; however, the exact behaviors and movements detected by monkeys wearing these devices have not yet been characterized. To test the hypothesis that collar-worn accelerometers primarily detect movements that involve movement of the whole body, 16 adult female rhesus monkeys, housed individually in stainless steel cages, wore loose-fitting collars with an attached small metal box housing an activity monitor (Actical omnidirectional accelerometer; MiniMitter Inc., Bend, OR) and behavior was videotaped. Videotaped behaviors were analyzed by frame-by-frame analysis. There was a significant correlation between total (all) movement revealed by videotape analysis and activity counts detected by the accelerometers (r(s)=0.612, P=0.012), primarily reflecting a strong correlation between whole body movement and activity counts (r(s)=0.647, P=0.007). In contrast, arm movement (r(s)=-0.221, P=0.412) and head/neck movement (r(s)=0.193, P=0.474) were not correlated with activity counts. These findings support the hypothesis that activity monitor placement on a collar allows for effective quantification of whole body movement in monkeys, and indicate that behaviors such as chewing and arm movement do not significantly influence activity recorded by collar-mounted accelerometers.
人类和其他物种在日常身体活动模式和水平上存在很大的个体差异。由于越来越明显的是,活动在包括觉醒、注意力、心血管健康和体重调节在内的许多生理过程中起着不可或缺的作用,因此人们对量化活动的兴趣日益增加。非人类灵长类动物是此类研究特别有用的实验模型,因为它们表现出的活动范围比啮齿动物和家畜等动物的活动更类似于人类。最近测量非人类灵长类动物活动的研究使用了全向加速度计,通常戴在项圈上;然而,佩戴这些设备的猴子所检测到的具体行为和动作尚未得到描述。为了检验项圈佩戴式加速度计主要检测涉及全身运动的假设,16只单独饲养在不锈钢笼子里的成年雌性恒河猴佩戴了宽松的项圈,项圈上附有一个装有活动监测器(Actical全向加速度计;MiniMitter公司,俄勒冈州本德)的小金属盒,并对其行为进行了录像。通过逐帧分析对录像行为进行分析。录像分析显示的总(所有)运动量与加速度计检测到的活动计数之间存在显著相关性(r(s)=0.612,P=0.012),主要反映了全身运动与活动计数之间的强相关性(r(s)=0.647,P=0.007)。相比之下,手臂运动(r(s)=-0.221,P=0.412)和头部/颈部运动(r(s)=0.193,P=0.474)与活动计数无关。这些发现支持了将活动监测器放置在项圈上可以有效量化猴子全身运动的假设,并表明诸如咀嚼和手臂运动等行为不会显著影响项圈安装式加速度计记录的活动。