Motor Activity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Active Video Gaming Compared to Unstructured, Outdoor Play in Children: Measurements of Estimated Energy Expenditure and Measured Percent Time in Moderate-to-Vigorous Physical Activity
Verified date | April 2018 |
Source | The University of Tennessee, Knoxville |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The increasing use of sedentary screen-based activities (SBAs) has been most recently blamed
for children and adolescents' lack of engagement in physical activity (PA). Studies indicate
a large portion of children participate high-levels of sedentary SBAs and the sedentary SBAs
appear to compete for time to engage in PA. If sedentary behavior is a substitute for PA, to
help increase PA, strategies need to be put into place that helps to decrease sedentary
behaviors.
One modification to sedentary videogames that may increase PA in children is to alter
sedentary videogames so that the videogames actually provide an option to engage in PA,
rather than to be sedentary. These types of games then don't compete with PA, but actually
are a source of PA. These types of videogames are called active video games (AVG) or
"Exer-gaming." Previous research demonstrates that energy-expenditure (EE) in AVG play is
comparable to moderate-intensity walking and produce greater EE than sedentary SBAs. However,
previous studies have been limited to measuring EE in AVG play to walking either on a
treadmill or in a structured setting. Studies have not investigated the EE of AVG play
compared to the EE in free-living outdoor play. Thus, the purpose of the proposed study is to
determine whether a greater EE is released during AVG play compared to free-living, outdoor
play in children.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 16 |
Est. completion date | October 2011 |
Est. primary completion date | October 2011 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 5 Years to 8 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - All children between 5- to 8- years of age and enrolled in the ELC, with parental consent can participate. Children must be healthy, with an absence of any known cardiopulmonary, metabolic, or orthopedic disease condition or ailment that would limit their participation in the study. Also, children with any type of grass allergy and sensitivity to sunlight will not be included in the study. Additionally, children must be of healthy weight with a body mass index (BMI)-for-age percentile between, > 5th % to < 85th %. Eligible children must also agree to be observed during outdoor activity and while playing the video game. Exclusion Criteria: - Children who are not between 5- to 8- years of age and those who are not enrolled in the ELC, and do not obtain parental consent will not be allowed to participate. Children must be healthy, those with any known cardiopulmonary, metabolic, or orthopedic disease condition or aliment that would limit their physical activity, cannot participate in the study. Also, children with any type of grass allergy and sensitivity to sunlight will not be included in the study. Additionally, children must be of healthy weight with a body mass index (BMI)-for-age percentile between, > 5% to < 85%. Children above or below the healthy weight criteria (body mass index (BMI)-for-age percentile below the 5th percentile or above the 85th percentile), will be ineligible and not be able to participate in the study. Eligible children must also agree to be observed during outdoor activity and video-recorded while playing the video game, those children who do not agree to be observed cannot participate in the research study. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | The Early Learning Center | Knoxville | Tennessee |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
The University of Tennessee, Knoxville |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Measured the EE acquired in 15 minutes during an AVG, an adventure game, as compared to unstructured outdoor play in children 5- to 8- years of age | Fifteen children, aged 5- to 8- years, with a normal body mass index (BMI)-for-age, will participate in unstructured, outdoor play and one AVGs in a randomized order. Activity type, duration and intensity will be measured via accelerometery and direct observation. The energy expenditure (EE) will be calculated from Metabolic Equivalent (MET) values and the percent of time each activity meets MVPA intensity will be calculated. If EE and intensity in AVG play is similar to EE and intensity in outdoor play, then AVG play could be a great supplement to efforts aimed at increasing PA in children. | within the study's 4 month period | |
Secondary | Compared the percent of time each activity meets the definition of MVPA (MET value >3) in children aged 5- to 8-years of age | Fifteen children, aged 5- to 8- years, with a normal body mass index (BMI)-for-age, will participate in unstructured, outdoor play and one AVGs in a randomized order. Activity type, duration and intensity will be measured via accelerometery and direct observation. The energy expenditure (EE) will be calculated from Metabolic Equivalent (MET) values and the percent of time each activity meets MVPA intensity will be calculated. If EE and intensity in AVG play is similar to EE and intensity in outdoor play, then AVG play could be a great supplement to efforts aimed at increasing PA in children. | within the study's 4 month time frame |
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