21 results on '"S. Mazdak Abulnaga"'
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2. Consistency Regularization Improves Placenta Segmentation in Fetal EPI MRI Time Series.
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Yingcheng Liu, Neerav Karani, S. Mazdak Abulnaga, Junshen Xu, Patricia Ellen Grant, Esra Abaci Turk, and Polina Golland
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- 2023
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3. Symmetric Volume Maps: Order-invariant Volumetric Mesh Correspondence with Free Boundary.
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S. Mazdak Abulnaga, Oded Stein, Polina Golland, and Justin Solomon 0001
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- 2023
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4. Automatic Segmentation of the Placenta in BOLD MRI Time Series.
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S. Mazdak Abulnaga, Sean I. Young, Katherine Hobgood, Eileen Pan, Clinton J. Wang, Patricia Ellen Grant, Esra Abaci Turk, and Polina Golland
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- 2022
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5. Volumetric Parameterization of the Placenta to a Flattened Template.
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S. Mazdak Abulnaga, Esra Abaci Turk, Mikhail Bessmeltsev, Patricia Ellen Grant, Justin Solomon 0001, and Polina Golland
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- 2022
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6. AnyStar: Domain randomized universal star-convex 3D instance segmentation.
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Neel Dey, S. Mazdak Abulnaga, Benjamin Billot, Esra Abaci Turk, Patricia Ellen Grant, Adrian V. Dalca, and Polina Golland
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- 2023
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7. Shape-aware Segmentation of the Placenta in BOLD Fetal MRI Time Series.
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S. Mazdak Abulnaga, Neel Dey, Sean I. Young, Eileen Pan, Katherine I. Hobgood, Clinton J. Wang, Patricia Ellen Grant, Esra Abaci Turk, and Polina Golland
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- 2023
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8. Dynamic Neural Fields for Learning Atlases of 4D Fetal MRI Time-series.
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Zeen Chi, Zhongxiao Cong, Clinton J. Wang, Yingcheng Liu, Esra Abaci Turk, Patricia Ellen Grant, S. Mazdak Abulnaga, Polina Golland, and Neel Dey
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- 2023
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9. Interactive all-hex meshing via cuboid decomposition.
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Lingxiao Li, Paul Zhang, Dmitriy Smirnov 0001, S. Mazdak Abulnaga, and Justin Solomon 0001
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- 2021
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10. Symmetric Volume Maps.
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S. Mazdak Abulnaga, Oded Stein, Polina Golland, and Justin M. Solomon
- Published
- 2022
11. Volumetric Parameterization of the Placenta to a Flattened Template.
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S. Mazdak Abulnaga, Esra Abaci Turk, Mikhail Bessmeltsev, Patricia Ellen Grant, Justin Solomon 0001, and Polina Golland
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- 2021
12. Placental MRI: Effect of maternal position and uterine contractions on placental BOLD MRI measurements
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Elfar Adalsteinsson, Borjan Gagoski, Drucilla J. Roberts, Lawrence L. Wald, Ata Turk, Henry A. Feldman, Polina Golland, Jeffrey N. Stout, William H. Barth, Carolina Bibbo, S. Mazdak Abulnaga, Julian N. Robinson, Jie Luo, Esra Abaci Turk, and P. Ellen Grant
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Placenta Diseases ,Contraction (grammar) ,Supine position ,Placenta ,Patient Positioning ,Article ,Uterine Contraction ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Braxton Hicks contractions ,Hyperoxia ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Gestational age ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Oxygenation ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Reproductive Medicine ,Cardiology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
© 2020 Elsevier Ltd Introduction: Before using blood-oxygen-level-dependent magnetic resonance imaging (BOLD MRI) during maternal hyperoxia as a method to detect individual placental dysfunction, it is necessary to understand spatiotemporal variations that represent normal placental function. We investigated the effect of maternal position and Braxton-Hicks contractions on estimates obtained from BOLD MRI of the placenta during maternal hyperoxia. Methods: For 24 uncomplicated singleton pregnancies (gestational age 27–36 weeks), two separate BOLD MRI datasets were acquired, one in the supine and one in the left lateral maternal position. The maternal oxygenation was adjusted as 5 min of room air (21% O2), followed by 5 min of 100% FiO2. After datasets were corrected for signal non-uniformities and motion, global and regional BOLD signal changes in R2* and voxel-wise Time-To-Plateau (TTP) in the placenta were measured. The overall placental and uterine volume changes were determined across time to detect contractions. Results: In mothers without contractions, increases in global placental R2* in the supine position were larger compared to the left lateral position with maternal hyperoxia. Maternal position did not alter global TTP but did result in regional changes in TTP. 57% of the subjects had Braxton-Hicks contractions and 58% of these had global placental R2* decreases during the contraction. Conclusion: Both maternal position and Braxton-Hicks contractions significantly affect global and regional changes in placental R2* and regional TTP. This suggests that both factors must be taken into account in analyses when comparing placental BOLD signals over time within and between individuals.
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- 2020
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13. Symmetric Volume Maps: Order-Invariant Volumetric Mesh Correspondence with Free Boundary
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S. Mazdak Abulnaga, Oded Stein, Polina Golland, and Justin Solomon
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FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Artificial Intelligence (cs.AI) ,Computer Science - Graphics ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design ,Graphics (cs.GR) - Abstract
Although shape correspondence is a central problem in geometry processing, most methods for this task apply only to two-dimensional surfaces. The neglected task of volumetric correspondence--a natural extension relevant to shapes extracted from simulation, medical imaging, and volume rendering--presents unique challenges that do not appear in the two-dimensional case. In this work, we propose a method for mapping between volumes represented as tetrahedral meshes. Our formulation minimizes a distortion energy designed to extract maps symmetrically, i.e., without dependence on the ordering of the source and target domains. We accompany our method with theoretical discussion describing the consequences of this symmetry assumption, leading us to select a symmetrized ARAP energy that favors isometric correspondences. Our final formulation optimizes for near-isometry while matching the boundary. We demonstrate our method on a diverse geometric dataset, producing low-distortion matchings that align closely to the boundary., Accepted to ACM Transactions on Graphics. Our code is available at https://github.com/mabulnaga/symmetric-volume-maps
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- 2022
14. Interactive All-Hex Meshing via Cuboid Decomposition
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S. Mazdak Abulnaga, Lingxiao Li, Paul Zhang, Justin Solomon, and Dmitriy Smirnov
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FOS: Computer and information sciences ,0209 industrial biotechnology ,Cuboid ,Computer science ,I.3.5 ,020207 software engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Polycube ,Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design ,Pipeline (software) ,Graphics (cs.GR) ,Domain (software engineering) ,020901 industrial engineering & automation ,Computer Science - Graphics ,Robustness (computer science) ,Computer graphics (images) ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Polygon mesh ,Hexahedron ,Representation (mathematics) ,ComputingMethodologies_COMPUTERGRAPHICS - Abstract
Standard PolyCube-based hexahedral (hex) meshing methods aim to deform the input domain into an axis-aligned PolyCube volume with integer corners; if this deformation is bijective, then applying the inverse map to the voxelized PolyCube yields a valid hex mesh. A key challenge in these methods is to maintain the bijectivity of the PolyCube deformation, thus reducing the robustness of these algorithms. In this work, we present an interactive pipeline for hex meshing that sidesteps this challenge by using a new representation of PolyCubes as unions of cuboids. We begin by deforming the input tetrahedral mesh into a near-PolyCube domain whose faces are loosely aligned to the major axis directions. We then build a PolyCube by optimizing the layout of a set of cuboids with user guidance to closely fit the deformed domain. Finally, we construct an inversion-free pullback map from the voxelized PolyCube to the input domain while optimizing for mesh quality metrics. We allow extensive user control over each stage, such as editing the voxelized PolyCube, positioning surface vertices, and exploring the trade-off among competing quality metrics, while also providing automatic alternatives. We validate our method on over one hundred shapes, including models that are challenging for past PolyCube-based and frame-field-based methods. Our pipeline reliably produces hex meshes with quality on par with or better than state-of-the-art. We additionally conduct a user study with 21 participants in which the majority prefer hex meshes they make using our tool to the ones from automatic state-of-the-art methods. This demonstrates the need for intuitive interactive hex meshing tools where the user can dictate the priorities of their mesh.
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- 2021
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15. Corrigendum to 'Placental MRI: Effect of maternal position and uterine contractions on placental BOLD MRI measurements' [Placenta 95 (2020) 69–77]
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Jie Luo, Elfar Adalsteinsson, Lawrence L. Wald, Julian N. Robinson, Henry A. Feldman, Polina Golland, Jeffrey N. Stout, Drucilla J. Roberts, P. Ellen Grant, Esra Abaci Turk, Ata Turk, S. Mazdak Abulnaga, Borjan Gagoski, William H. Barth, and Carolina Bibbo
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Position (obstetrics) ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Reproductive Medicine ,business.industry ,Placenta ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Medicine ,Anatomy ,business ,Developmental Biology - Published
- 2020
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16. CT-To-MR Conditional Generative Adversarial Networks for Ischemic Stroke Lesion Segmentation
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Jonathan Rubin and S. Mazdak Abulnaga
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Ground truth ,Discriminator ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Visual comparison ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Pattern recognition ,Perfusion scanning ,02 engineering and technology ,Convolutional neural network ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Signal-to-noise ratio ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,medicine ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,Segmentation ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Infarcted brain tissue resulting from acute stroke readily shows up as hyperintense regions within diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI). It has also been proposed that computed tomography perfusion (CTP) could alternatively be used to triage stroke patients, given improvements in speed and availability, as well as reduced cost. However, CTP has a lower signal to noise ratio compared to MR. In this work, we investigate whether a conditional mapping can be learned by a generative adversarial network to map CTP inputs to generated MR DWI that more clearly delineates hyperintense regions due to ischemic stroke. We detail the architectures of the generator and discriminator and describe the training process used to perform image-to-image translation from multi-modal CT perfusion maps to diffusion weighted MR outputs. We evaluate the results both qualitatively by visual comparison of generated MR to ground truth, as well as quantitatively by training fully convolutional neural networks that make use of generated MR data inputs to perform ischemic stroke lesion segmentation. Segmentation networks trained using generated CT-to-MR inputs result in at least some improvement on all metrics used for evaluation, compared with networks that only use CT perfusion input.
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- 2019
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17. Ischemic Stroke Lesion Segmentation in CT Perfusion Scans Using Pyramid Pooling and Focal Loss
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Jonathan Rubin and S. Mazdak Abulnaga
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Network architecture ,Lesion Identification ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Pooling ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION ,Pattern recognition ,Perfusion scanning ,medicine.disease ,Convolutional neural network ,medicine ,Artificial intelligence ,Pyramid (image processing) ,business ,Radiation treatment planning ,Stroke - Abstract
We present a fully convolutional neural network for segmenting ischemic stroke lesions in CT perfusion images for the ISLES 2018 challenge. Treatment of stroke is time sensitive and current standards for lesion identification require manual segmentation, a time consuming and challenging process. Automatic segmentation methods present the possibility of accurately identifying lesions and improving treatment planning. Our model is based on the PSPNet, a network architecture that makes use of pyramid pooling to provide global and local contextual information. To learn the varying shapes of the lesions, we train our network using focal loss, a loss function designed for the network to focus on learning the more difficult samples. We compare our model to networks trained using the U-Net and V-Net architectures. Our approach demonstrates effective performance in lesion segmentation and ranked among the top performers at the challenge conclusion.
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- 2019
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18. Placental Flattening via Volumetric Parameterization
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P. Ellen Grant, Esra Abaci Turk, Polina Golland, Mikhail Bessmeltsev, Justin Solomon, and S. Mazdak Abulnaga
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Computer science ,Boundary (topology) ,020207 software engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Article ,Flattening ,3. Good health ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Placenta ,Distortion ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,medicine ,Algorithm - Abstract
We present a volumetric mesh-based algorithm for flattening the placenta to a canonical template to enable effective visualization of local anatomy and function. Monitoring placental function in vivo promises to support pregnancy assessment and to improve care outcomes. We aim to alleviate visualization and interpretation challenges presented by the shape of the placenta when it is attached to the curved uterine wall. To do so, we flatten the volumetric mesh that captures placental shape to resemble the well-studied ex vivo shape. We formulate our method as a map from the in vivo shape to a flattened template that minimizes the symmetric Dirichlet energy to control distortion throughout the volume. Local injectivity is enforced via constrained line search during gradient descent. We evaluate the proposed method on 28 placenta shapes extracted from MRI images in a clinical study of placental function. We achieve sub-voxel accuracy in mapping the boundary of the placenta to the template while successfully controlling distortion throughout the volume. We illustrate how the resulting mapping of the placenta enhances visualization of placental anatomy and function. Our implementation is freely available at https://github.com/mabulnaga/placenta-flattening.
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- 2019
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19. A toolbox to visually explore cerebellar shape changes in cerebellar disease and dysfunction
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Aaron Carass, Kalyani Kansal, Bruno Jedynak, Chiadi U. Onyike, Sarah H. Ying, Jerry L. Prince, S. Mazdak Abulnaga, and Zhen Yang
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Cerebellum ,Computer science ,Machine learning ,computer.software_genre ,050105 experimental psychology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Cerebellar ataxia ,business.industry ,Dimensionality reduction ,05 social sciences ,Cerebellar function ,Motor control ,Linear discriminant analysis ,medicine.disease ,Toolbox ,Cerebellar diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Spinocerebellar ataxia ,Artificial intelligence ,medicine.symptom ,business ,computer ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The cerebellum plays an important role in motor control and is also involved in cognitive processes. Cerebellar function is specialized by location, although the exact topographic functional relationship is not fully understood. The spinocerebellar ataxias are a group of neurodegenerative diseases that cause regional atrophy in the cerebellum, yielding distinct motor and cognitive problems. The ability to study the region-specific atrophy patterns can provide insight into the problem of relating cerebellar function to location. In an effort to study these structural change patterns, we developed a toolbox in MATLAB to provide researchers a unique way to visually explore the correlation between cerebellar lobule shape changes and function loss, with a rich set of visualization and analysis modules. In this paper, we outline the functions and highlight the utility of the toolbox. The toolbox takes as input landmark shape representations of subjects’ cerebellar substructures. A principal component analysis is used for dimension reduction. Following this, a linear discriminant analysis and a regression analysis can be performed to find the discriminant direction associated with a specific disease type, or the regression line of a specific functional measure can be generated. The characteristic structural change pattern of a disease type or of a functional score is visualized by sampling points on the discriminant or regression line. The sampled points are used to reconstruct synthetic cerebellar lobule shapes. We showed a few case studies highlighting the utility of the toolbox and we compare the analysis results with the literature.
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- 2017
20. Landmark Based Shape Analysis for Cerebellar Ataxia Classification and Cerebellar Atrophy Pattern Visualization
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Aaron Carass, Chiadi U. Onyike, S. Mazdak Abulnaga, Jerry L. Prince, Zhen Yang, Kalyani Kansal, Bruno Jedynak, and Sarah H. Ying
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Cerebellum ,Ataxia ,Cerebellar ataxia ,business.industry ,Dimensionality reduction ,Biology ,Linear discriminant analysis ,medicine.disease ,Article ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Atrophy ,medicine ,Cerebellar atrophy ,Computer vision ,Artificial intelligence ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Shape analysis (digital geometry) - Abstract
Cerebellar dysfunction can lead to a wide range of movement disorders. Studying the cerebellar atrophy pattern associated with different cerebellar disease types can potentially help in diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment planning. In this paper, we present a landmark based shape analysis pipeline to classify healthy control and different ataxia types and to visualize the characteristic cerebellar atrophy patterns associated with different types. A highly informative feature representation of the cerebellar structure is constructed by extracting dense homologous landmarks on the boundary surfaces of cerebellar sub-structures. A diagnosis group classifier based on this representation is built using partial least square dimension reduction and regularized linear discriminant analysis. The characteristic atrophy pattern for an ataxia type is visualized by sampling along the discriminant direction between healthy controls and the ataxia type. Experimental results show that the proposed method can successfully classify healthy controls and different ataxia types. The visualized cerebellar atrophy patterns were consistent with the regional volume decreases observed in previous studies, but the proposed method provides intuitive and detailed understanding about changes of overall size and shape of the cerebellum, as well as that of individual lobules.
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- 2016
21. Assessment of a Mobile Game ('MobileKids Monster Manor') to Promote Physical Activity Among Children
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J. Mark Ansermino, Guy A. Dumont, Aryannah Umedaly, Anne K. Junker, Leah Robertson, Jean-Pierre Chanoine, Ainara Garde, and S. Mazdak Abulnaga
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Male ,Health (social science) ,Adolescent ,Applied psychology ,Physical fitness ,Physical activity ,Fitness Trackers ,Health Promotion ,computer.software_genre ,Double-Blind Method ,Phone ,Software Design ,Intervention (counseling) ,Humans ,Child ,Exercise ,Internet ,Motivation ,Multimedia ,business.industry ,Rehabilitation ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Baseline data ,Computer Science Applications ,Activity monitor ,Video Games ,Mobile phone ,Female ,Sedentary Behavior ,Psychology ,business ,computer ,Cell Phone ,Monster - Abstract
The majority of children in North America are not meeting current physical activity guidelines. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of a mobile phone game ("MobileKids Monster Manor") as a tool to promote voluntary physical activity among children.The game integrates data from an accelerometer-based activity monitor (Tractivity(®); Kineteks Corp., Vancouver, BC, Canada) wirelessly connected to a phone and was developed with the involvement of a team of young advisors (KidsCan Initiative: Involving Youth as Ambassadors for Research). Fifty-four children 8-13 years old completed a week of baseline data collection by wearing an accelerometer but receiving no feedback about their activity levels. The 54 children were then sequentially assigned to two groups: One group played "MobileKids Monster Manor," and the other received daily activity feedback (steps and active minutes) via an online program. The physical activity (baseline and intervention weeks) was measured using the activity monitor and compared using two-way repeated-measures analysis of variance (intervention×time).Forty-seven children with a body mass index (BMI) z-score of 0.35±1.18 successfully completed the study. Significant (P=0.01) increases in physical activity were observed during the intervention week in both the game and feedback groups (1191 and 796 steps/day, respectively). In the game group, greater physical activity was demonstrated in children with higher BMI z-score, showing 964 steps/day more per BMI z-score unit (P=0.03; 95 percent confidence interval of 98 to 1829).Further investigation is required to confirm that our game design promotes physical activity.
- Published
- 2015
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