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Stacy A. Clemes
Researcher at Loughborough University
Publications - 112
Citations - 4647
Stacy A. Clemes is an academic researcher from Loughborough University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Sitting. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 96 publications receiving 3879 citations. Previous affiliations of Stacy A. Clemes include University of Leicester & University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
How many steps/day are enough? for adults
Catrine Tudor-Locke,Cora L Craig,Wendy J. Brown,Stacy A. Clemes,Katrien De Cocker,Billie Giles-Corti,Yoshiro Hatano,Shigeru Inoue,Sandra Matsudo,Nanette Mutrie,Jean-Michel Oppert,David A. Rowe,Michael D. Schmidt,Michael D. Schmidt,Grant Schofield,John C. Spence,Pedro J. Teixeira,Mark A. Tully,Steven N. Blair +18 more
TL;DR: The purpose of this review was to update existing knowledge of "How many steps/day are enough?", and to inform step-based recommendations consistent with current physical activity guidelines.
Journal ArticleDOI
Methods of Measurement in epidemiology: Sedentary Behaviour
Andrew J. Atkin,Trish Gorely,Stacy A. Clemes,Thomas Yates,Charlotte L. Edwardson,Soren Brage,Jo Salmon,Simon J. Marshall,Stuart J. H. Biddle +8 more
TL;DR: High-quality measurement is essential in all elements of sedentary behaviour epidemiology, from determining associations with health outcomes to the development and evaluation of behaviour change interventions.
Journal ArticleDOI
Office workers' objectively measured sedentary behavior and physical activity during and outside working hours.
TL;DR: Those who are most sedentary at work do not compensate by increasing their PA or reducing their sedentary time outside work, and Occupational interventions should address workplace and leisure-time sedentary behavior.
Journal ArticleDOI
The relationship between sedentary behaviour and physical activity in adults: A systematic review
TL;DR: Current evidence, though limited, supports the notion that sedentary behaviour displaces light intensity activity, and findings of this review suggest inverse associations between SB and PA were weak to moderate.
Journal ArticleDOI
Energy expenditure during common sitting and standing tasks: examining the 1.5 MET definition of sedentary behaviour
Maedeh Mansoubi,Natalie Pearson,Stacy A. Clemes,Stuart J. H. Biddle,Danielle H. Bodicoat,Keith Tolfrey,Charlotte L. Edwardson,Charlotte L. Edwardson,Thomas Yates,Thomas Yates +9 more
TL;DR: The suggested 1.5 MET threshold for sedentary behaviors seems reasonable however some sitting based activities may be classified as non-sedentary, the effect of this on the definition of sedentary behavior and associations with metabolic health needs further investigation.