Calories
mom22lappys1
Posts: 27 Member
So confused with how the calories are calculated and exercise calories calculated 🙁
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Replies
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Your mfp goal is calculated based on the height, weight, activity level, and weekly weight loss goal you entered. What exactly are you confused about?7
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Why it says I have 700 calories burned when I did no exercise0
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mom22lappys1 wrote: »Why it says I have 700 calories burned when I did no exercise
If you have linked an activity tracker or app that syncs step data, than it is saying that your activity level is actually higher than what you told MFP and as a result it made an adjustment in the exercise portion to account for that difference.
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I do have my fitbit synced1
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mom22lappys1 wrote: »I do have my fitbit synced
Ta da!!!2 -
Here, everything you want to know about FitBit and this site:
https://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/group/1290-fitbit-users1 -
So is it accurate?0
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mom22lappys1 wrote: »So is it accurate?
It’s hard to say. Everyone is different in that respect and logging accuracy can make it seem wrong as well.
Well what is your activity level set to and how many steps do you typically get?
For me:
Fitbit’s without HRM (Zip, Flex, Flex2) underestimated my daily calorie burn by 250 calories a day on average.
Fitbit’s with a HRM (Surge, Blaze, Ionic) are closer in accuracy. Though here recently I am thinking my Ionic might be giving me a lower calorie burn than the Blaze did (so it might be underestimating slightly). One of these days I need to tighten my logging up a bit and do the math.1 -
mom22lappys1 wrote: »So is it accurate?
Possibly. There is some varience either direction. What I find that works is to start with eating back 50-75% of the calories MFP says you've burned. Then track for a good month. If you find yourself losing faster than expected, eat back more of your exercise calories. If you find yourself losing slower than expected, eat back less.
I have a Garmin and based on my own results I find it very accurate to what I am burning through workouts and steps taken.0 -
Accuracy for fitness trackers depends on what you do. If you spend 8 hours a day driving on bumpy roads your burn estimate will be too high; if you spend the same amount of time cycling on a smooth, flat road it will be too low. If you mostly walk around and do pretty normal daily tasks, it’ll be very accurate.
My Fitbit underestimates my burn a bit, but I find it really useful overall. I have very different activity levels on different days, and I can just eat what it tells me to eat without trying to figure it all out myself. If you do the same for a few weeks, you’ll start to get a sense of how accurate yours is for you. 🙂2 -
FlyingMolly wrote: »Accuracy for fitness trackers depends on what you do. If you spend 8 hours a day driving on bumpy roads your burn estimate will be too high; if you spend the same amount of time cycling on a smooth, flat road it will be too low. If you mostly walk around and do pretty normal daily tasks, it’ll be very accurate.
My Fitbit underestimates my burn a bit, but I find it really useful overall. I have very different activity levels on different days, and I can just eat what it tells me to eat without trying to figure it all out myself. If you do the same for a few weeks, you’ll start to get a sense of how accurate yours is for you. 🙂
Trackers, like online calculators (such as the one built into MFP) produce estimates, based on statistically-based formulas from careful scientific research and the best insights the algorithym-creating humans can conceive. They're still estimates. They're still statistical.
They'll be accurate for most people, or close enough. They'll be inaccurate for a few. They'll be very, very inaccurate for a very, very few.
My Garmin Vivoactive 3 (with HRM) underestimates my daily calorie burn by several hundred calories (25-30%-ish), just like MFP (and most other calculators). I have no idea why. But, since I understand statistics, I don't worry about it. (I also don't sync my Garmin to MFP - LOL! Don't need to be losing fast in maintenance.).
It's important to understand that trackers measure things like movements, distance, altitude, heart rate, etc. From that, they estimate distance, steps, calorie burn, etc. Measurement is (potentially) accurate. Estimation is statistical, subject to greater error.
Everyone need to monitor and adjust based on his/her actual experience.
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