TY - JOUR AU - King, Abby C. AB - Comparison of Passive Versus Active Photo Capture of Built Environment Features by Technology Naïve Latinos Using the SenseCam and Stanford Healthy Neighborhood Discovery Tool Jylana L. Sheats1, Sandra J. Winter1, Priscilla Padilla-Romero1, Lisa Goldman-Rosas1, Lauren A. Grieco 1, Abby C. King 1 Stanford Prevention Research Center, 1070 Arastradero Road, Suite 100, Palo Alto, CA 94304 2 Fair Oaks Clinic, 2710 Middlefield Road, Redwood City, CA 94063 {sheats, sjwinter, lgrosas, lagrieco, king}@stanford.edu, ppadilla-romero@smcgov.org longer period of time. Older adults reported more positive perceptions about the SenseCam than adolescents. While the sample was small, study results indicate that the SenseCam may be useful in capturing built environment features that affect physical activity but that community residents don't notice, perhaps because they are habituated to certain conditions in their neighborhoods. The results suggest that this type of habituation may have different valences (positive or negative) for different age groups. Given the impact the built environment has on physical activity, particularly in low-income communities, further research regarding the use of the SenseCam to passively gather built environment data in tech-naïve populations is warranted. Author Keywords ABSTRACT Assessments designed to measure features of the built environment are challenging and have traditionally been conducted TI - Comparison of passive versus active photo capture of built environment features by technology naïve Latinos using the SenseCam and Stanford healthy neighborhood discovery tool DA - 2013-11-18 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/association-for-computing-machinery/comparison-of-passive-versus-active-photo-capture-of-built-environment-jDWH3iAfjv DP - DeepDyve ER -