Abstract
Ambulatory wearable monitoring of human physiology is increasingly utilized in the fields of psychology, movement sciences, and medicine. With the rapid growth of available consumer- and research-oriented wearables, researchers are faced with a multitude of devices to choose from. It is unfeasible timewise for researchers to determine all relevant technical specifications, available signals, signal sampling details, and (raw) data availability, and conduct a search of studies regarding the reliability, validity, and usability of wearables. Thus, selection of wearables for a given study proves highly challenging and will often be unsystematic and uninformed. The 10-year research program Stress in Action initiated a publicly accessible database of wearable ambulatory monitoring devices. We outline the genesis and final structure of the first version of the Stress in Action Wearables Database (SiA-WD) and a summary of the characteristics of the wearables it currently contains. Furthermore, one short-term (2 days) and one long-term (3 months) scenario from the field of stress research are provided with walkthroughs of how the SiA-WD can help select the optimal wearable for a specific research project. Insights gathered include the scarceness of studies testing wearable user-friendliness, inconsistencies in reported validity statistics, and imprecise manufacturer documentation on recorded physiological data such as sampling rate (or window) of signals and parameter extraction. The SiA-WD is the first open-access database to simultaneously include physiological sampling information and technical specifications along with a systematic reliability, validity, and usability search. It will be iteratively expanded to facilitate informed and time-efficient wearable selection. For access to the database, see the following: https://osf.io/umgvp/.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 171 |
| Journal | Behavior research methods |
| Volume | 57 |
| Issue number | 6 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Jun 2025 |
Keywords
- Ambulatory
- Database
- Physiology
- Reliability
- Usability
- Validation
- Wearable
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Stress in action wearables database: A database of noninvasive wearable monitors with systematic technical, reliability, validity, and usability information'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Cite this
- APA
- Author
- BIBTEX
- Harvard
- Standard
- RIS
- Vancouver