How The Quantified Life Can Help You Achieve Your New Year’s Resolutions

quantified

New Year’s wellness resolutions are like prom night: a lot of hype, even more promises, and a disappointing follow-through. A paltry 19 percent of wannabe health nuts follow through with their annual resolutions, according to University of Scranton Professor John Norcross.

The quickest way to dissolve your hardened commitments into a bowl of disappointed Jell-O is to set a course without clear goals and constant improvement. This is where technology and a dash of the scientific method can help.

Instead of relying on fragmented web advice and our own fragile intuition, “quantified self” is all about treating self-improvement with the rigor of an academic laboratory: make singular adjustments, chart progress, and cumulate learnings.

Quantified self can get sort of extreme; I’ve done things with my body that should neither see sunlight nor be talked about in public. Fortunately, cheaper gadgets, diagnosis startups, and web tools have opened up the “quantified self” movement to everyday consumers who just want to save time and feel a little sexier in front of the mirror.

So, here’s how to super-charge your New Year’s resolutions with science.

Set The Right Metrics

metrics

First thing first: you need the right numbers. For instance, “weight loss” is a silly path to sexy, sexy abs, since you’ll probably want to pack on heavy muscle while shedding those love handles. What you actually want is lean body mass.

Instead of a standard scale, splurge on one that measures fat percentage, such as the Withings Smart Body Analyzer. I’ve found that the Withings scale isn’t very accurate for measuring my total body fat percentages, but it’s generally good at measuring changes, which is really what counts in a resolution. Or, if money’s tight and you can dedicate more time, just pick up some skinfold calipers (a handheld clip).

In other words, you want a measure that is as close to your goal as possible. Instead of “going to the gym more,” try “increasing my max squat.” Instead of “walking more,” try “total number of hours active per day” (the Nike Fuelband SE has a nice metric for this one, since sitting all day can counteract scheduled exercise).

This makes nutritional goals difficult, because there’s no good way to measure whether your body is, in fact, absorbing them. Best to stick to performance-minded goals and see if eating healthier helps you meet them.

Set The Baseline And Control Variables

baseline

Slow your roll, eager beaver. You don’t need to overcrowd the gym on January 2nd. Instead, baseline your normal activity and abilities for a week. What is your one-mile run? What’s your squat max? How many hours a day are you active? How much are you sleeping? What are you eating?

Personally, I log everything on a Google spreadsheet, but all of the fitness trackers have their own daily logging methods.

Now, make one (one!) significant improvement and see what happens over the next three weeks. Cut out grains (yes, all grains). Set a consistent bedtime. For muscle gain, try bulking up with 0.8 gram of (healthy) protein per pound of body fat per day.

I find that setting experimental results helps me commit, because I know that a single misstep can screw up weeks of effort. If your experiment works, great! If not, there’s something wrong and you need to re-evaluate. But since you only changed one thing, you know what works and what doesn’t.

Avoid broad changes, like “eating healthy.” Instead, try exchanging one of your meals for a salad, but with the same number of calories (olive oil or avocado is a great way to pack in healthy fats).

Health is a marathon, not a sprint.

Look For Patterns And Anomalies

pattern-anomoly

Self-experimentation is more Christopher Columbus and less Pirates of the Caribbean: often the best results are accidental. For instance, I learned that early-morning light was screwing up my last REM sleep cycle after looking over my Zeo sleep headband output (Zeo went belly-up, unfortunately). So, I picked up some blackout blinds.

I also discovered that I could replace coffee with 30 seconds of exercise after I decided to do a quick Crossfit workout one morning after a terrible night’s sleep.

Every body is unique; mulling over your data will help you discover things you never knew helped.

Before the quantified self, I used to be a roller coaster dieter, haphazardly patching together bits of advice. It rarely ever worked. Now, I know what works for my body and what doesn’t. The control has brought sanity to the typical chaos of self-improvement. With a bit of science and some technology, this might be the year that your New Year’s resolutions work.

[Images: Bryce Durbin]

Apple hires Nike FuelBand designer Ben Shaffer; Cupertino’s wearable can’t be far behind

A month after after poaching fitness expert and Nike FuelBand consultant Jay Blahnik, Apple has added another former Nike employee to its ranks. Cupertino has reportedly hired Ben Shaffer, who served the sneaker brand as Studio Director of the Innovation Kitchen. In this role, Shaffer helped develop the FuelBand and the Flyknit shoe, and it serves to reason that his position at Apple will involve wearables as well. It’s also not a stretch to assume that the company’s upcoming wearable will incorporate some of Nike’s fitness-tracking tech — here’s hoping we won’t be waiting too long to see the fruits of this partnership.

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Source: 9 to 5 Mac

A Fuelband-like Collar Shows You What Life Is Like As a Polar Bear

Those nifty Fuelbands and activity trackers can measure pretty much anything you do and even knows when you’re having sex. So why not use similar technology to try and understand mysterious animals like the Polar Bear. That makes so much sense! And even better, why not add a GoPro camera to see what life is like for these majestic beasts.

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Your Fuelband Knows When You’re Having Sex

Your Fuelband Knows When You're Having Sex

Everybody loves these Fuelbands and other activity trackers because they supply you with troves of data about your everyday life. Sometimes, however, it’s a little bit too much information.

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These Are the 10 Startups That Nike Is Paying To Make Its Apps Better

Late last year Nike announced that it was partnering with TechStars for its first ever Nike+ Accelerator program. In theory, the 10 startups chosen for this inaugural class would help strengthen and fix any glaring holes in Nike’s existing FuelBand and Nike+ apps. More »

BodyMedia’s Fitness Tracker Pretties Itself Up

BodyMedia fitness trackers have always been the ugly ducklings, because, well, they’re ugly. Thankfully, that’s about to change. The new Core 2 fitness tracker keeps tabs on a whole lot of metrics, and it’s a lot easier on the eyes. More »

Apple now selling Nike+ FuelBand in the U.S., Canada, and U.K.

Nike is announcing that its popular Nike+ FuelBand will be sold on Apple Stores nationwide, as well as in Canada and the U.K. Additionally, two new colors have been added into the list of options. Now users of the Nike+ FuelBand can also enjoy Black Steel and Black Ice colors apart from the already-existing Black Steel and limited edition Ice. Launched earlier this year, the Nike+ FuelBand is designed to capture different metrics such as time, calories, and steps.

It tracks the activity of the user on a daily basis and assigns a score called NikeFuel for the finished activities. There’s also a Nike+ FuelBand mobile app that’s designed for the iPhone 5, iPhone 4S and 4, as well as the iPod touch. The app will basically reveal one’s progress overall and compare those results with their friends who are also using the app. You can also get the Nike+ FuelBand online for $149.95.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Nike+ FuelBand helps people stay healthy, Nike+Kinect Training for Xbox 360 owners,

Nike+ FuelBand iOS app updated to run along your Path, sync in the background

Nike+ Fuelband iOS app updated to run along your Path, sync in the background

If you decided to snag the latest Nike+ wristband earlier this year, you’re about to get some added functionality thanks to an iOS application update. First, the outfit has added Path integration to the mobile software. Users can now keep track of the sights they’ve visited while out for a jog or bike ride and share said moments / achievements with their mates. When the day comes to a close, those points-of-interest along the trail will appear on the app’s progress graph. You’ll also encounter background syncing by holding down the FuelBand’s button alongside the ability to check battery status, offline data access and setting the time with your iPhone or iPod touch. For a quick look at what you can expect to see with the refresh, sprint to the gallery below.

Nike+ FuelBand iOS app updated to run along your Path, sync in the background originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 Jun 2012 09:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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