Scully Jason Y, Vernez Moudon Anne, Hurvitz Philip M, Aggarwal Anju, Drewnowski Adam
The Urban Form Lab, Department of Urban Design and Planning, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States of America.
Center for Public Health Nutrition, Department of Epidemiology, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Apr 7;12(4):e0174859. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0174859. eCollection 2017.
To assess differences between GPS and self-reported measures of location, we examined visits to fast food restaurants and supermarkets using a spatiotemporal framework. Data came from 446 participants who responded to a survey, filled out travel diaries of places visited, and wore a GPS receiver for seven consecutive days. Provided by Public Health Seattle King County, addresses from food permit data were matched to King County tax assessor parcels in a GIS. A three-step process was used to verify travel-diary reported visits using GPS records: (1) GPS records were temporally matched if their timestamps were within the time window created by the arrival and departure times reported in the travel diary; (2) the temporally matched GPS records were then spatially matched if they were located in a food establishment parcel of the same type reported in the diary; (3) the travel diary visit was then GPS-sensed if the name of food establishment in the parcel matched the one reported in the travel diary. To account for errors in reporting arrival and departure times, GPS records were temporally matched to three time windows: the exact time, +/- 10 minutes, and +/- 30 minutes. One third of the participants reported 273 visits to fast food restaurants; 88% reported 1,102 visits to supermarkets. Of these, 77.3 percent of the fast food and 78.6 percent supermarket visits were GPS-sensed using the +/-10-minute time window. At this time window, the mean travel-diary reported fast food visit duration was 14.5 minutes (SD 20.2), 1.7 minutes longer than the GPS-sensed visit. For supermarkets, the reported visit duration was 23.7 minutes (SD 18.9), 3.4 minutes longer than the GPS-sensed visit. Travel diaries provide reasonably accurate information on the locations and brand names of fast food restaurants and supermarkets participants report visiting.
为了评估全球定位系统(GPS)测量的位置与自我报告的位置测量之间的差异,我们使用时空框架研究了对快餐店和超市的访问情况。数据来自446名参与者,他们回复了一项调查,填写了去过地点的旅行日记,并连续七天佩戴GPS接收器。由西雅图金县公共卫生部门提供的食品许可证数据中的地址,在地理信息系统(GIS)中与金县税务评估包裹进行了匹配。使用GPS记录验证旅行日记中报告的访问情况采用了三步流程:(1)如果GPS记录的时间戳在旅行日记中报告的到达和离开时间所创建的时间窗口内,则在时间上进行匹配;(2)然后,如果时间匹配的GPS记录位于日记中报告的相同类型的食品经营包裹内,则在空间上进行匹配;(3)如果包裹内食品经营场所的名称与旅行日记中报告的名称匹配,则该旅行日记访问被GPS感知到。为了考虑报告到达和离开时间的误差,GPS记录在时间上与三个时间窗口进行匹配:准确时间、正负10分钟和正负30分钟。三分之一的参与者报告了273次对快餐店的访问;88%的参与者报告了1102次对超市的访问。其中,使用正负10分钟时间窗口时,77.3%的快餐店访问和78.6%的超市访问被GPS感知到。在这个时间窗口,旅行日记报告的快餐店访问平均持续时间为14.5分钟(标准差20.2),比GPS感知到的访问长1.7分钟。对于超市,报告的访问持续时间为23.7分钟(标准差18.9),比GPS感知到的访问长