Video methods in the quantification of children's exposures

Ferguson, AC; Canales, RA; Beamer, P; Auyeung, W; Key, M; Munninghoff, A; Lee, KT; Robertson, A; Leckie, JO

HERO ID

1060416

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2006

Language

English

PMID

16249797

HERO ID 1060416
In Press No
Year 2006
Title Video methods in the quantification of children's exposures
Authors Ferguson, AC; Canales, RA; Beamer, P; Auyeung, W; Key, M; Munninghoff, A; Lee, KT; Robertson, A; Leckie, JO
Journal Journal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology
Volume 16
Issue 3
Page Numbers 287-298
Abstract In 1994, Stanford University's Exposure Research Group (ERG) conducted its first pilot study to collect micro-level activity time series (MLATS) data for young children. The pilot study involved videotaping four children of farm workers in the Salinas Valley of California and converting their videotaped activities to valuable text files of contact behavior using video-translation techniques. These MLATS are especially useful for describing intermittent dermal (i.e., second-by-second account of surfaces and objects contacted) and non-dietary ingestion (second-by-second account of objects or hands placed in the mouth) contact behavior. Second-by-second records of children contact behavior are amenable to quantitative and statistical analysis and allow for more accurate model estimates of human exposure and dose to environmental contaminants. Activity patterns data for modeling inhalation exposure (i.e., accounts of microenvironments visited) can also be extracted from the MLATS data. Since the pilot study, ERG has collected an immense MLATS data set for 92 children using more developed and refined videotaping and video-translation methodologies. This paper describes all aspects required for the collection of MLATS including: subject recruitment techniques, videotaping and video-translation processes, and potential data analysis. This paper also describes the quality assurance steps employed for these new MLATS projects, including: training, data management, and the application of interobserver and intraobserver agreement during video translation. The discussion of these issues and ERG's experiences in dealing with them can assist other groups in the conduct of research that employs these more quantitative techniques.
Doi 10.1038/sj.jea.7500459
Pmid 16249797
Wosid WOS:000237513600008
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword dermal exposure; video translation; microlevel activity patterns; observational data; interobserver agreement; videotaping
Is Qa No