8 results on '"Phillips, Christine B."'
Search Results
2. Online versus in-person comparison of Microscale Audit of Pedestrian Streetscapes (MAPS) assessments: reliability of alternate methods
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Phillips, Christine B, Engelberg, Jessa K, Geremia, Carrie M, Zhu, Wenfei, Kurka, Jonathan M, Cain, Kelli L, Sallis, James F, Conway, Terry L, and Adams, Marc A
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Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Arizona ,California ,Cities ,Environment Design ,Humans ,Internet ,Pedestrians ,Reproducibility of Results ,Residence Characteristics ,Walking ,Built environment ,Walkability ,Direct observation ,Measurement ,Physical activity ,Virtual observation ,Public Health and Health Services ,Human Geography ,Epidemiology ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundAn online version of the Microscale Audit of Pedestrian Streetscapes (Abbreviated) tool was adapted to virtually audit built environment features supportive of physical activity. The current study assessed inter-rater reliability of MAPS Online between in-person raters and online raters unfamiliar with the regions.MethodsIn-person and online audits were conducted for a total of 120 quarter-mile routes (60 per site) in Phoenix, AZ and San Diego, CA. Routes in each city included 40 residential origins stratified by walkability and SES, and 20 commercial centers. In-person audits were conducted by raters residing in their region. Online audits were conducted by raters in the alternate location using Google Maps (Aerial and Street View) images. The MAPS Abbreviated Online tool consisted of four sections: overall route, street segments, crossings and cul-de-sacs. Items within each section were grouped into subscales, and inter-rater reliability (ICCs) was assessed for subscales at multiple levels of aggregation.ResultsOnline and in-person audits showed excellent agreement for overall positive microscale (ICC = 0.86, 95% CI [0.80, 0.90]) and grand scores (ICC = 0.93, 95% CI [0.89, 0.95]). Substantial to near-perfect agreement was found for 21 of 30 (70%) subscales, valence, and subsection scores, with ICCs ranging from 0.62, 95% CI [0.50, 0.72] to 0.95, 95% CI [0.93, 0.97]. Lowest agreement was found for the aesthetics and social characteristics scores, with ICCs ranging from 0.07, 95% CI [-0.12, 0.24] to 0.27, 95% CI [0.10, 0.43].ConclusionsResults support use of the MAPS Abbreviated Online tool to reliably assess microscale neighborhood features that support physical activity and may be used by raters residing in different geographic regions and unfamiliar with the audit areas.
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- 2017
3. The Impact of Monetary Incentives on Delay Discounting Within a Year-Long Physical Activity Intervention.
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Berardi, Vincent, Phillips, Christine B, McEntee, Mindy L, Stecher, Chad, Todd, Michael, and Adams, Marc A
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DELAY discounting (Psychology) , *MONETARY incentives , *INCENTIVE (Psychology) , *REWARD (Psychology) , *PHYSICAL activity - Abstract
Background Delay discounting is the depreciation in a reward's perceived value as a function of the time until receipt. Monetary incentive programs that provide rewards contingent on meeting daily physical activity (PA) goals may change participants' delay discounting preferences. Purpose Determine if monetary incentives provided in close temporal proximity to meeting PA goals changed delay discounting, and if such changes mediated intervention effects. Methods Inactive adults (n = 512) wore accelerometers during a 12-month intervention where they received proximal monetary incentives for meeting daily moderate-to-vigorous PA (MVPA) goals or delayed incentives for study participation. Delay discount rate and average MVPA were assessed at baseline, end of intervention, and a 24-month follow-up. Using structural equation modeling, we tested effects of proximal versus delayed rewards on delay discounting and whether any changes mediated intervention effects on MVPA. PA self-efficacy was also evaluated as a potential mediator, and both self-efficacy and delay discounting were assessed as potential moderators of intervention effects. Results Proximal rewards significantly increased participants' delay discounting (β = 0.238, confidence interval [CI]: −0.078, 0.380), indicating greater sensitivity to reinforcement timing. This change did not mediate incentive-associated increases in MVPA at the end of the 12-month intervention (β = −0.016, CI: −0.053, 0.019) or at a 24-month follow-up (β = −0.020, CI: −0.059, 0.018). Moderation effects were not found. Conclusions Incentive-induced increases in delay discounting did not deleteriously impact MVPA. This finding may help assuage concerns about using monetary incentives for PA promotion, but further research regarding the consequences of changes in delay discounting is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Daily Physical Activity and Cognitive Function Variability in Older Adults.
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Phillips, Christine B., Edwards, Jerri D., Andel, Ross, and Kilpatrick, Marcus
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ACCELEROMETERS ,COGNITIVE testing ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,ACTIVITIES of daily living ,TASK performance ,EFFECT sizes (Statistics) ,PHYSICAL activity ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,INTRACLASS correlation ,OLD age - Abstract
Physical activity (PA) is believed to preserve cognitive function in older adulthood, though little is known about these relationships within the context of daily life. The present microlongitudinal pilot study explored within- and between-person relationships between daily PA and cognitive function and also examined within-person effect sizes in a sample of community-dwelling older adults. Fifty-one healthy participants (mean age = 70.1 years) wore an accelerometer and completed a cognitive assessment battery for five days. There were no significant associations between cognitive task performance and participants’ daily or average PA over the study period. Effect size estimates indicated that PA explained 0–24% of within-person variability in cognitive function, depending on cognitive task and PA dose. Results indicate that PA may have near-term cognitive effects and should be explored as a possible strategy to enhance older adults’ ability to perform cognitively complex activities within the context of daily living. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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5. Delay Discount Rate Moderates a Physical Activity Intervention Testing Immediate Rewards.
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Phillips, Christine B., Hurley, Jane C., Angadi, Siddhartha S., Todd, Michael, Berardi, Vincent, Hovell, Melbourne F., and Adams, Marc A.
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MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *OBESITY , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *REGRESSION analysis , *REWARD (Psychology) , *WEARABLE technology , *SEDENTARY lifestyles , *PHYSICAL activity , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DELAY discounting (Psychology) , *PHYSICAL fitness mobile apps - Abstract
Financial incentives can increase physical activity (PA), but differences in the immediacy of reward delivery and individual differences in delay discount rates (i.e., higher discount values associated with less tolerance for delayed rewards) may explain differential responding. The current study tested whether delay discount rate moderated the relative effectiveness of immediate financial rewards on increasing daily PA. Inactive, overweight adults (ages 18–60, N = 96) were randomized to receive either smaller, immediate goal-contingent rewards or larger, delayed rewards for participation. Delay discount rates were derived for those who completed the Monetary Choice Questionnaire (N = 85). Linear mixed models tested interactions between discount rate and intervention arm on changes in mean daily Fitbit-measured steps from baseline to intervention phases, and rates of change during the intervention phase. Across all groups, participants increased by 2258 steps/day on average from baseline to intervention and declined by 9 steps/day across the 4-month intervention phase. The mean increase in daily steps was greater for immediate reward-arm participants across all discount rates. Descriptive exploration of reward effects by delay discount rate suggested that the magnitude of reward effects decreased at higher discount rates. During the 4-month intervention phase, rates of decline in daily steps were similar in both reward arms, but declines became more pronounced at higher discount rates. Overall, intervention efficacy decreased with less tolerance for delays. The importance of financial reward immediacy for increasing PA appears to increase with greater delay discount rates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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6. The Impact of Three Cognitive Training Interventions on Older Adults’ Physical Functioning Across 5 Years.
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Ross, Lesley A., Sprague, Briana N., Phillips, Christine B., O'connor, Melissa L., and Dodson, Joan E.
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GERIATRIC assessment ,COGNITION ,COMPARATIVE studies ,GRIP strength ,STATISTICAL sampling ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,CONTROL groups ,PHYSICAL activity ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,OLD age - Abstract
Objective: Physical functioning is closely associated with cognition. The current study assessed the impact of three cognitive training programs on objective measures of physical functioning across 5 years. Method: Older adults randomized to a processing speed (n = 702), reasoning (n = 694), or memory (n = 703) training intervention were compared with those randomized to a no-contact control condition (n = 698). Intention-to-treat (ITT) and treatment-received/dosage (time-varying number of training sessions) analyses were conducted. Results: There were no transfer effects in the ITT analyses. Treatment-received models demonstrated that training sessions (i.e., higher dosage) across all intervention arms transferred to better maintained Digit Symbol Copy and Turn 360 performance relative to the control group. More reasoning training transferred to better grip strength. Discussion: This is the first study to demonstrate differential longitudinal cognitive training transfer effects to three performance-based physical functioning measures. Future research should investigate mechanisms of far-transfer effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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7. Rationale, design, and baseline characteristics of WalkIT Arizona: A factorial randomized trial testing adaptive goals and financial reinforcement to increase walking across higher and lower walkable neighborhoods.
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Adams, Marc A., Hurley, Jane C., Phillips, Christine B., Todd, Michael, Angadi, Siddhartha S., Berardi, Vincent, Hovell, Melbourne F., and Hooker, Steven
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ADAPTIVE testing , *ECOLOGICAL models , *WALKABILITY , *SOCIAL status , *FACTORIALS , *NEIGHBORHOODS - Abstract
Little change over the decades has been seen in adults meeting moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) guidelines. Numerous individual-level interventions to increase MVPA have been designed, mostly static interventions without consideration for neighborhood context. Recent technologies make adaptive interventions for MVPA feasible. Unlike static interventions, adaptive intervention components (e.g., goal setting) adjust frequently to an individual's performance. Such technologies also allow for more precise delivery of "smaller, sooner incentives" that may result in greater MVPA than "larger, later incentives". Combined, these factors could enhance MVPA adoption. Additionally, a central tenet of ecological models is that MVPA is sensitive to neighborhood environment design; lower-walkable neighborhoods constrain MVPA adoption and maintenance, limiting the effects of individual-level interventions. Higher-walkable neighborhoods are hypothesized to enhance MVPA interventions. Few prospective studies have addressed this premise. This report describes the rationale, design, intervention components, and baseline sample of a study testing individual-level adaptive goal-setting and incentive interventions for MVPA adoption and maintenance over 2 years among adults from neighborhoods known to vary in neighborhood walkability. We scaled these evidenced-based interventions and tested them against static-goal-setting and delayed-incentive comparisons in a 2 × 2 factorial randomized trial to increase MVPA among 512 healthy insufficiently-active adults. Participants (64.3% female, M age = 45.5 ± 9.1 years, M BMI = 33.9 ± 7.3 kg/m2, 18.8% Hispanic, 84.0% White) were recruited from May 2016 to May 2018 from block groups ranked on GIS-measured neighborhood walkability and socioeconomic status (SES) and classified into four neighborhood types: "high walkable/high SES," "high walkable/low SES," "low walkable/high SES," and "low walkable/low SES." Results from this ongoing study will provide evidence for some of the central research questions of ecological models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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8. Adaptive Goals and Reinforcement Timing to Increase Physical Activity in Adults: A Factorial Randomized Trial.
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Adams, Marc A., Todd, Michael, Angadi, Siddhartha S., Hurley, Jane C., Stecher, Chad, Berardi, Vincent, Phillips, Christine B., McEntee, Mindy L., Hovell, Melbourne F., and Hooker, Steven P.
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PHYSICAL activity , *PEDOMETERS , *INCENTIVE (Psychology) , *ADULTS , *FACTORIALS , *MOBILE health - Abstract
Introduction: Potent lifestyle interventions to increase moderate-to-vigorous physical activity are urgently needed for population-level chronic disease prevention. This trial tested the independent and joint effects of a mobile health system automating adaptive goal setting and immediate financial reinforcement for increasing daily walking among insufficiently active adults.Study Design: Participants were randomized into a 2 (adaptive versus static goal setting) X 2 (immediate versus delayed financial incentive timing) condition factorial trial to increase walking.Settings/participants: Participants (N=512 adults) were recruited between 2016 and 2018 and were 64.5% female, aged 18-60 years, 18.8% Hispanic, 6.1% African American, and 83% White.Intervention: Principles of reinforcement and behavioral economics directed intervention design.Main Outcome Measures: Participants wore accelerometers daily (133,876 day-level observations) that remotely measured moderate-to-vigorous physical activity bout minutes of ≥3 minutes/day for 1 year. Primary outcomes were between-condition differences in (1) engaging ≥1 bout of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity on each day and (2) on days with ≥1 bout, daily total moderate-to-vigorous physical activity minutes.Results: Mixed-effects hurdle models tested treatment group X phase (time) interactions using an intent-to-treat approach in 2021. Engaging in any ambulatory moderate-to-vigorous physical activity was greater for Adaptive than for Static Goal groups (OR=2.34, 95% CI=2.10, 2.60 vs OR=1.66, 95% CI=1.50, 1.84; p<0.001) and for Immediate than for Static Reinforcement groups (OR=2.16 95% CI=1.94, 2.40 vs OR=1.77, 95% CI=1.59, 1.97; p<0.01). The Immediate Reinforcement group increased by 16.54 moderate-to-vigorous physical activity minutes/day, whereas the Delayed Reinforcement group increased by 9.91 minutes/day (p<0.001). The combined Adaptive Goals + Immediate Reinforcement group increased by 16.52 moderate-to-vigorous physical activity minutes/day, significantly more than that of either Delayed Reinforcement group.Conclusions: This study offers automated and scalable-behavior change strategies for increasing walking among adults most at-risk for chronic diseases attributed to sedentary lifestyles.Trial Registration: This study is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02717663). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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