Clapping is exercise? (fitbit)
lorib642
Posts: 1,942 Member
I have my fitbit set to vibrate after a certain number of steps. I went to a musical last night. When we were applauding at the end I felt it vibrate. It counted my claps as steps.
It's not an issue or anything, I just thought it was funny/interesting
It's not an issue or anything, I just thought it was funny/interesting
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Replies
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It helps if you think of "steps" as units of energy burn, rather than the physical act of moving one foot and then the other.0
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Fit bits are pretty inaccurate because it's based of wrist movement...0
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Doesn't wrist movement burn calories, too? All movement burns calories. My fitbit seems to be doing a pretty reasonable job with accuracy.0
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Wrist movement calorie burn is very, very minimal. A step takes more energy than moving your wrist0
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Did it do your goal vibration or just the one that puts it in activity mode?
Not sure which one you have, but my Flex will go in activity mode if my arm vibrates too much - clapping, chopping stuff, pushing a cart, etc.
If it was the goal vibration...well, oops?
~Lyssa0 -
it was the goal one. I don't think it added many steps, but some. It just surprised me.0
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autumnblade75 wrote: »Doesn't wrist movement burn calories, too? All movement burns calories. My fitbit seems to be doing a pretty reasonable job with accuracy.
So a step moves your bodyweight the distance of 50-60 cm.
Moving the weight of your hand a few centimetres and impacting the other hand an equivalent isn't going to consume remotely the same amount of energy.
To the originator, you've discovered false positives. The accelerometers in your fitbit only measure movement, they can't differentiate steps from claps.0 -
I can only offer anecdotal evidence that waving one's arms around provides a smaller calorie allowance in my fitbit's data from a similar number of traditional steps. There may be some small discrepancies, but I still think the device is smarter than some people want to give it credit for.0
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I get really annoyed when my FitBit vibrates for my 10,000 steps when I'm not walking. It happens when I'm driving occasionally, and I feel a bit ripped off.0
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The Fitbit is a great tool to keep yourself moving and to get a general consensus of how your daily activity is, but take it from someone who used one for a year, they CAN be extremely inaccurate. Mine would log up to 40,000 steps on days I never left the house because of arm movements, not that I blame the Fitbit for that it is just recording what it's told to record, but I knew it was inaccurate and worked around it. It will register occasional driving, it will measure elevators as steps, it will measure mixing food in a mixer as steps. I'm not saying don't use one, they are great tools when used properly and I've planned on getting another one for a while (last one broke), but understand it does have allot of faults0
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I wear my Fitbit flex as a necklace, for me it's much more accurate. The only thing I know to do, if I got a lot of extraneous steps is to create the activity of driving during the period of extraneous steps. I get a lot of steps rocking in a rocking chair and swiping my iPad. I usually remove the fitbit when I'm watching tv, for that reason. I'm still happy with it because it does motivate me.0
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I am happy with it. It does motivate me.0
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I call them the jack off steps!0
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queenliz99 wrote: »I call them the jack off steps!
Lol0 -
I wear mine on my ankle. I find it's much more accurate that way.
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I wear mine on my ankle. I find it's much more accurate that way.
I'd find that highly unlikely, they accelerometers are designed to estimate steps based on arm movement.
That would only be legitimate if you're in a role where you have lots of wrist movement, but few steps; checkout operator for example.0 -
autumnblade75 wrote: »I can only offer anecdotal evidence...
So you haven't looked at how these devices are designed, and how they compare to the design of their peer devices...but I still think the device is smarter than some people want to give it credit for.
ok...
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I do, in fact, have a job with lots of arm movement but minimal actual steps. And yet, the estimated burns are not out of line with expectations.
I'm also not experiencing the weird heart rate fluctuations that some people are reporting. Perhaps I'm just lucky.0 -
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I love, love, love my FitBit HR. But, it is not 100% accurate. It doesn't record all my steps if I am on an elliptical and does not record miles on a bicycle, so if I get a few extra steps from moving my arms around, I feel like it all evens itself out. But, then again, the heart rate is really what is calculating calories and we know that the most accurate way to calculate heart rate is with a chest strap, so there is gong to be a discrepancy. As long as we keep it in perspective I think it works itself out. I am super happy with mine, but I do wish I could wear it for swimming!0
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