A tool to extract meaningful health information from large accelerometer datasets. The software generates time-series and summary metrics useful for answering key questions such as how much time is spent in sleep, sedentary behaviour, or doing physical activity. The backbone of this repository is the self-supervised learning of Hang et al.: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41746-024-01062-3
Minimum requirements: Python>=3.9, Java 8 (1.8)
The following instructions make use of Anaconda to meet the minimum requirements:
-
Download & install Miniconda (light-weight version of Anaconda).
-
(Windows) Once installed, launch the Anaconda Prompt.
-
Create a virtual environment:
conda create -n actinet python=3.9 openjdk pip
This creates a virtual environment called
actinet
with Python version 3.9, OpenJDK, and Pip. -
Activate the environment:
conda activate actinet
You should now see
(actinet)
written in front of your prompt. -
Install
actinet
:pip install actinet
You are all set! The next time that you want to use actinet
, open the Anaconda Prompt and activate the environment (step 4). If you see (actinet)
in front of your prompt, you are ready to go!
# Process an AX3 file
$ actinet sample.cwa
# Or an ActiGraph file
$ actinet sample.gt3x
# Or a GENEActiv file
$ actinet sample.bin
# Or a CSV file (see data format below)
$ actinet sample.csv
Some systems may face issues with Java when running the script. If this is your case, try fixing OpenJDK to version 8:
conda create -n actinet openjdk=8
To use this package offline, one must first download and install the relevant classifier file and model modules. This repository offers two ways of doing this.
Run the following code when you have internet access:
actinet --cache-classifier
Following this, the actinet classifier can be used as standard without internet access, without needing to specify the flags relating to the model repository.
Alternatively, you can download or git clone the ssl modules from the ssl-wearables repository.
In addition, you can donwload/prepare a custom classifier file.
Once this is downloaded to an appopriate location, you can run the actinet model using:
actinet sample.cwa -c /path/to/classifier.joblib.lzma -m /path/to/ssl-wearables
By default, output files will be stored in a folder named after the input file, outputs/{filename}/
, created in the current working directory. You can change the output path with the -o
flag:
$ actinet sample.cwa -o /path/to/some/folder/
<Output summary written to: /path/to/some/folder/sample-outputSummary.json>
<Time series output written to: /path/to/some/folder/sample-timeSeries.csv.gz>
The following output files are created:
- Info.json Summary info, as shown above.
- timeSeries.csv Raw time-series of activity levels
See Data Dictionary for the list of output variables.
To plot the activity profiles, you can use the -p flag:
$ actinet sample.cwa -p
<Output plot written to: data/sample-timeSeries-plot.png>
Adjusted estimates are provided that account for missing data. Missing values in the time-series are imputed with the mean of the same timepoint of other available days. For adjusted totals and daily statistics, 24h multiples are needed and will be imputed if necessary. Estimates will be NaN where data is still missing after imputation.
If a CSV file is provided, it must have the following header: time
, x
, y
, z
.
Example:
time,x,y,z
2013-10-21 10:00:08.000,-0.078923,0.396706,0.917759
2013-10-21 10:00:08.010,-0.094370,0.381479,0.933580
2013-10-21 10:00:08.020,-0.094370,0.366252,0.901938
2013-10-21 10:00:08.030,-0.078923,0.411933,0.901938
...
To process multiple files you can create a text file in Notepad which includes one line for each file you wish to process, as shown below for file1.cwa, file2.cwa, and file2.cwa.
Example text file commands.txt:
actinet file1.cwa &
actinet file2.cwa &
actinet file3.cwa
:END
Once this file is created, run cmd < commands.txt
from the terminal.
Create a file command.sh with:
actinet file1.cwa
actinet file2.cwa
actinet file3.cwa
Then, run bash command.sh
from the terminal.
A utility script is provided to collate outputs from multiple runs:
actinet-collate-outputs outputs/
This will collate all *-Info.json files found in outputs/ and generate a CSV file.
When using this tool, please consider citing the works listed in CITATION.md.
See LICENSE.md.
We would like to thank all our code contributors, manuscript co-authors, and research participants for their help in making this work possible.