West Virginia University School of Public Health, Morgantown, WV, United States.
West Virginia University Davis College of Agriculture, Natural Resources, and Design, Morgantown, WV, United States.
Front Public Health. 2021 Mar 17;9:584740. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2021.584740. eCollection 2021.
Trails are ubiquitous and far-reaching, but research on the impact trails have on physical activity is limited by the lack of resource-efficient, accurate, and practical systematic observation tools. Commonly used infrared trail sensors count trail use and may broadly differentiate activity (i.e., bicyclist vs. pedestrian), but cannot detect nuances needed for outcomes research such as frequency, intensity, time, and type of activity. Motion-activated passive infrared cameras (PICs), used in ecological research and visitor management in wildlife areas, have potential applicability as a systematic observation data collection tool. We conducted a 7-month field test of a PIC as a systematic observation data collection tool on a hiking trail, using photos to identify each trail user's physical activity type, age, sex, and other characteristics. We also tallied hourly trail use counts from the photos, using Bland-Altman plots, paired -tests, Concordance Correlation Coefficient, Kendall's Tau-b, and a novel inter-counter reliability measure to test concordance against concurrent hourly counts from an infrared sensor. The field test proved informative, providing photos of 2,447 human users of the trail over 4,974 h of data collection. Nearly all of the users were walkers (94.0%) and most were male (69.2%). More of the males used the trail alone (44.8%) than did females (29.8%). Concordance was strong between instruments ( < 0.01), though biased ( < 0.01). Inter-counter reliability was 91.1% during the field study, but only 36.2% when excluding the hours with no detectable trail use on either device. Bland-Altman plots highlighted the tendency for the infrared sensor to provide higher counts, especially for the subsample of hours that had counts >0 on either device (14.0%; 694 h). The study's findings highlight the benefits of using PICs to track trail user characteristics despite the needs to further refine best practices for image coding, camera location, and settings. More widespread field use is limited by the extensive amount of time required to code photos and the need to validate the PICs as a trail use counter. The future potential of PICs as a trail-specific PA research and management tool is discussed.
步道无处不在且影响深远,但由于缺乏资源高效、准确和实用的系统观测工具,有关步道对身体活动影响的研究受到限制。常用的红外步道传感器可计算步道使用情况,并可大致区分活动类型(例如,骑自行车者与行人),但无法检测到结果研究所需的细微差别,例如活动的频率、强度、时间和类型。运动激活的被动式红外摄像机(PIC)在野生动物区的生态研究和游客管理中具有潜在的适用性,可以作为系统观测数据收集工具。我们在一条徒步旅行步道上进行了为期 7 个月的 PIC 作为系统观测数据收集工具的野外测试,使用照片来识别每个步道使用者的身体活动类型、年龄、性别和其他特征。我们还使用 Bland-Altman 图、配对检验、一致性相关系数、Kendall's Tau-b 和一种新的计数器间可靠性度量来计算照片中的每小时步道使用次数,以测试与红外传感器同时记录的每小时步道使用次数的一致性。野外测试提供了有价值的信息,在 4974 小时的数据收集过程中,共拍摄到 2447 名步道使用者的照片。几乎所有使用者都是步行者(94.0%),大多数是男性(69.2%)。独自使用步道的男性(44.8%)比女性(29.8%)多。仪器之间的一致性很强(<0.01),但存在偏差(<0.01)。在野外研究期间,计数器间的可靠性为 91.1%,但在排除两个设备都无法检测到步道使用的小时数后,可靠性仅为 36.2%。Bland-Altman 图突出显示了红外传感器提供更高计数的趋势,特别是对于两个设备上都有计数>0 的小时子样本(14.0%;694 小时)。该研究结果强调了尽管需要进一步完善图像编码、相机位置和设置的最佳实践,但使用 PIC 来跟踪步道使用者特征的好处。更广泛的野外使用受到需要大量时间来编码照片以及需要验证 PIC 作为步道使用计数器的限制。讨论了 PIC 作为特定步道 PA 研究和管理工具的未来潜力。