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BioMed Central, International Journal of Health Geographics, 1(14), 2015

DOI: 10.1186/s12942-015-0027-3

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Assessing opportunities for physical activity in the built environment of children: interrelation between kernel density and neighborhood scale

Journal article published in 2015 by Christoph Buck ORCID, Thomas Kneib, Tobias Tkaczick, Kenn Konstabel ORCID, Iris Pigeot
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Abstract Background Built environment studies provide broad evidence that urban characteristics influence physical activity (PA). However, findings are still difficult to compare, due to inconsistent measures assessing urban point characteristics and varying definitions of spatial scale. Both were found to influence the strength of the association between the built environment and PA. Methods We simultaneously evaluated the effect of kernel approaches and network-distances to investigate the association between urban characteristics and physical activity depending on spatial scale and intensity measure. We assessed urban measures of point characteristics such as intersections, public transit stations, and public open spaces in ego-centered network-dependent neighborhoods based on geographical data of one German study region of the IDEFICS study. We calculated point intensities using the simple intensity and kernel approaches based on fixed bandwidths, cross-validated bandwidths including isotropic and anisotropic kernel functions and considering adaptive bandwidths that adjust for residential density. We distinguished six network-distances from 500 m up to 2 km to calculate each intensity measure. A log-gamma regression model was used to investigate the effect of each urban measure on moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) of 400 2- to 9.9-year old children who participated in the IDEFICS study. Models were stratified by sex and age groups, i.e. pre-school children (2 to ${