Description and evaluation of a Newton-based electronic appetite rating system for temporal tracking of appetite in human subjects
Description and evaluation of a Newton-based electronic appetite rating system for temporal tracking of appetite in human subjects
This study assessed the reliability and validity of a palm-top-based electronic appetite rating system (EARS) in relation to the traditional paper and pen method. Twenty healthy subjects [10 male (M) and 10 female (F)] — mean age M=31 years (S.D.=8), F=27 years (S.D.=5); mean BMI M=24 (S.D.=2), F=21 (S.D.=5) — participated in a 4-day protocol. Measurements were made on days 1 and 4. Subjects were given paper and an EARS to log hourly subjective motivation to eat during waking hours. Food intake and meal times were fixed. Subjects were given a maintenance diet (comprising 40% fat, 47% carbohydrate and 13% protein by energy) calculated at 1.6×Resting Metabolic Rate (RMR), as three isoenergetic meals. Bland and Altman's test for bias between two measurement techniques found significant differences between EARS and paper and pen for two of eight responses (hunger and fullness). Regression analysis confirmed that there were no day, sex or order effects between ratings obtained using either technique. For 15 subjects, there was no significant difference between results, with a linear relationship between the two methods that explained most of the variance (r2 ranged from 62.6 to 98.6). The slope for all subjects was less than 1, which was partly explained by a tendency for bias at the extreme end of results on the EARS technique. These data suggest that the EARS is a useful and reliable technique for real-time data collection in appetite research but that it should not be used interchangeably with paper and pen techniques.
Newton-based electronic appetite system, appetite
615-619
Stubbs, R. James
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Hughes, Darren A.
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Johnstone, Alexandra M.
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Rowley, Edel
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Ferris, Steve
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Elia, Marinos
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Stratton, Rebecca
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King, Neil
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Blundell, John E.
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2001
Stubbs, R. James
e683bc6e-07ac-4808-b721-6dfe4c8112cf
Hughes, Darren A.
ac958cb5-d874-4194-b971-177537240a89
Johnstone, Alexandra M.
6e6ad8c7-a214-4792-a0fa-fd3455213dd1
Rowley, Edel
9bdce30b-403c-422f-844c-2f0aa62107e0
Ferris, Steve
11223c71-5552-412b-b63b-f935f8cd1f0f
Elia, Marinos
964bf436-e623-46d6-bc3f-5dd04c9ef4c1
Stratton, Rebecca
bf841e43-a4e2-44f0-9f25-bf67564a8d74
King, Neil
a9950ea8-316c-4237-afe0-6f5cc2a32959
Blundell, John E.
4f0da30c-2e40-43fc-a013-8624d73166b5
Stubbs, R. James, Hughes, Darren A., Johnstone, Alexandra M., Rowley, Edel, Ferris, Steve, Elia, Marinos, Stratton, Rebecca, King, Neil and Blundell, John E.
(2001)
Description and evaluation of a Newton-based electronic appetite rating system for temporal tracking of appetite in human subjects.
Physiology and Behavior, 72 (4), .
(doi:10.1016/S0031-9384(00)00440-6).
Abstract
This study assessed the reliability and validity of a palm-top-based electronic appetite rating system (EARS) in relation to the traditional paper and pen method. Twenty healthy subjects [10 male (M) and 10 female (F)] — mean age M=31 years (S.D.=8), F=27 years (S.D.=5); mean BMI M=24 (S.D.=2), F=21 (S.D.=5) — participated in a 4-day protocol. Measurements were made on days 1 and 4. Subjects were given paper and an EARS to log hourly subjective motivation to eat during waking hours. Food intake and meal times were fixed. Subjects were given a maintenance diet (comprising 40% fat, 47% carbohydrate and 13% protein by energy) calculated at 1.6×Resting Metabolic Rate (RMR), as three isoenergetic meals. Bland and Altman's test for bias between two measurement techniques found significant differences between EARS and paper and pen for two of eight responses (hunger and fullness). Regression analysis confirmed that there were no day, sex or order effects between ratings obtained using either technique. For 15 subjects, there was no significant difference between results, with a linear relationship between the two methods that explained most of the variance (r2 ranged from 62.6 to 98.6). The slope for all subjects was less than 1, which was partly explained by a tendency for bias at the extreme end of results on the EARS technique. These data suggest that the EARS is a useful and reliable technique for real-time data collection in appetite research but that it should not be used interchangeably with paper and pen techniques.
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Published date: 2001
Keywords:
Newton-based electronic appetite system, appetite
Organisations:
Dev Origins of Health & Disease
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Local EPrints ID: 26005
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/26005
ISSN: 0031-9384
PURE UUID: 6b1bd6da-7844-4f0e-8f12-93a8b84e78f6
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Date deposited: 21 Apr 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:07
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Author:
R. James Stubbs
Author:
Darren A. Hughes
Author:
Alexandra M. Johnstone
Author:
Edel Rowley
Author:
Steve Ferris
Author:
Rebecca Stratton
Author:
Neil King
Author:
John E. Blundell
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