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1.
Innov Aging ; 8(7): igae057, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38974775

ABSTRACT

Background and Objectives: The number of people with dementia is expected to triple to 152 million in 2050, with 90% having accompanying behavioral and psychological symptoms (BPSD). Agitation is among the most critical BPSD and can lead to decreased quality of life for people with dementia and their caregivers. This study aims to explore objective quantification of agitation in people with dementia by analyzing the relationships between physiological and movement data from wearables and observational measures of agitation. Research Design and Methods: The data presented here is from 30 people with dementia, each included for 1 week, collected following our previously published multimodal data collection protocol. This observational protocol has a cross-sectional repeated measures design, encompassing data from both wearable and fixed sensors. Generalized linear mixed models were used to quantify the relationship between data from different wearable sensor modalities and agitation, as well as motor and verbal agitation specifically. Results: Several features from wearable data are significantly associated with agitation, at least the p < .05 level (absolute ß: 0.224-0.753). Additionally, different features are informative depending on the agitation type or the patient the data were collected from. Adding context with key confounding variables (time of day, movement, and temperature) allows for a clearer interpretation of feature differences when a person with dementia is agitated. Discussion and Implications: The features shown to be significantly different, across the study population, suggest possible autonomic nervous system activation when agitated. Differences when splitting the data by agitation type point toward a need for future detection models to tailor to the primary type of agitation expressed. Finally, patient-specific differences in features indicate a need for patient- or group-level model personalization. The findings reported in this study both reinforce and add to the fundamental understanding of and can be used to drive the objective quantification of agitation.

2.
JMIR Hum Factors ; 9(4): e40123, 2022 Dec 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36459403

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Although digital tools for healthy nutrition have shown great potential, their actual impact remains variable as digital solutions often do not fit users' needs and barriers. This is especially poignant for priority communities in society. Involving these groups in citizen science may have great benefits even beyond the increase in knowledge of the lives and experiences of these groups. However, this requires specialized skills. Participants from priority groups could benefit from an approach that offers sensitization and discussion to help them voice their needs regarding healthy nutrition and technology to support healthy eating. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to gather insights into people's thoughts on everyday eating practices, self-regulation in healthy eating, and skill acquisition and on applying technological innovations to these domains. METHODS: Participants answered 3 daily questionnaires to garner their current practices regarding habits, self-regulation, skills, and technology use surrounding healthy eating and make it easier for them to collect their thoughts and experiences (sensitization). Within a week of filling out the 3 questionnaires, participants took part in a web-based focus group discussion session. All sessions were transcribed and analyzed using a thematic qualitative approach. RESULTS: A total of 42 people took part in 7 focus group interviews of 6 people each. The analysis showed that participants would like to receive support from technology for a broad range of aspects of nutrition, such as measuring the effect their personal nutrition has on their individual health, providing them with reliable product information, giving them practical guidance for healthy eating and snacking, and reducing the burden of registering food intake. Technology should be easy to use, reduce burdens, and be tailored to personal situations. Privacy and cost were major concerns for the participants. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that people from low- and medium-socioeconomic-status groups have a need for specific support in tailoring their knowledge of healthy nutrition to their own situation and see technology as a means to achieve this.

3.
Brain Sci ; 11(7)2021 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34356121

ABSTRACT

Sex differences are repeatedly observed in spatial cognition tasks. However, the role of environmental factors such as gaming experience remains unclear. In this exploratory study, navigation and object-relocation were combined in a naturalistic virtual reality-based spatial task. The sample consisted of n = 53 Dutch children aged 9-11 years. Overall, girls (n = 24) and boys (n = 29) performed equally accurately, although there was an increase in accuracy with age for boys (ηp2 = 0.09). Boys navigated faster than girls (ηp2 = 0.29), and this difference increased with age (ηp2 = 0.07). More gaming experience in boys versus girls (Cohen's d = 0.88) did not explain any result observed. We encourage future confirmatory studies to use the paradigm presented here to investigate the current results in a larger sample. These findings could be beneficial for optimizing spatial cognition training interventions.

4.
J Med Internet Res ; 22(9): e18253, 2020 09 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32902392

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Chronic stress is increasing in prevalence and is associated with several physical and mental disorders. Although it is proven that acute stress changes physiology, much less is known about the relationship between physiology and long-term stress. Continuous measurement of vital signs in daily life and chronic stress detection algorithms could serve this purpose. For this, it is paramount to model the effects of chronic stress on human physiology and include other cofounders, such as demographics, enabling the enrichment of a population-wide approach with individual variations. OBJECTIVE: The main objectives of this study were to investigate the effect of chronic stress on heart rate (HR) over time while correcting for weekdays versus weekends and to test a possible modulation effect by gender and age in a healthy cohort. METHODS: Throughout 2016 and 2017, healthy employees of technology companies were asked to participate in a 5-day observation stress study. They were required to wear two wearables, of which one included an electrocardiogram sensor. The derived HR was averaged per hour and served as an output for a mixed design model including a trigonometric fit over time with four harmonics (periods of 24, 12, 8, and 6 hours), gender, age, whether it was a workday or weekend day, and a chronic stress score derived from the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) as predictors. RESULTS: The study included 328 subjects, of which 142 were female and 186 were male participants, with a mean age of 38.9 (SD 10.2) years and a mean PSS score of 13.7 (SD 6.0). As main effects, gender (χ21=24.02, P<.001); the hour of the day (χ21=73.22, P<.001); the circadian harmonic (χ22=284.4, P<.001); and the harmonic over 12 hours (χ22=242.1, P<.001), over 8 hours (χ22=23.78, P<.001), and over 6 hours (χ22=82.96, P<.001) had a significant effect on HR. Two three-way interaction effects were found. The interaction of age, whether it was a workday or weekend day, and the circadian harmonic over time were significantly correlated with HR (χ22=7.13, P=.03), as well as the interaction of gender, PSS score, and the circadian harmonic over time (χ22=7.59, P=.02). CONCLUSIONS: The results show a relationship between HR and the three-way interaction of chronic stress, gender, and the circadian harmonic. The modulation by gender might be related to evolution-based energy utilization strategies, as suggested in related literature studies. More research, including daily cortisol assessment, longer recordings, and a wider population, should be performed to confirm this interpretation. This would enable the development of more complete and personalized models of chronic stress.


Subject(s)
Heart Rate/physiology , Stress, Psychological/complications , Wearable Electronic Devices/standards , Adult , Cohort Studies , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Gender Identity , Humans , Male , Stress, Psychological/psychology , Time Factors
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