Due to necessary scheduled maintenance, the JMIR Publications website will be unavailable from Wednesday, July 01, 2020 at 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM EST. We apologize in advance for any inconvenience this may cause you.
Who will be affected?
Readers: No access to all 28 journals. We recommend accessing our articles via PubMed Central
Authors: No access to the submission form or your user account.
Reviewers: No access to your user account. Please download manuscripts you are reviewing for offline reading before Wednesday, July 01, 2020 at 7:00 PM.
Editors: No access to your user account to assign reviewers or make decisions.
Copyeditors: No access to user account. Please download manuscripts you are copyediting before Wednesday, July 01, 2020 at 7:00 PM.
Zhang Y, Folarin AA, Sun S, Cummins N, Vairavan S, Qian L, Ranjan Y, Rashid Z, Conde P, Stewart C, Laiou P, Sankesara H, Matcham F, White KM, Oetzmann C, Ivan A, Lamers F, Siddi S, Simblett S, Rintala A, Mohr DC, Myin-Germeys I, Wykes T, Haro JM, Penninx BW, Narayan VA, Annas P, Hotopf M, Dobson RJ, RADAR-CNS consortium
Associations Between Depression Symptom Severity and Daily-Life Gait Characteristics Derived From Long-Term Acceleration Signals in Real-World Settings: Retrospective Analysis
Associations between Depression Symptom Severity and Daily-life Gait Characteristics Derived from Long-term Acceleration Signals in Real-world Settings: Retrospective Analysis
Yuezhou Zhang;
Amos A Folarin;
Shaoxiong Sun;
Nicholas Cummins;
Srinivasan Vairavan;
Linglong Qian;
Yatharth Ranjan;
Zulqarnain Rashid;
Pauline Conde;
Callum Stewart;
Petroula Laiou;
Heet Sankesara;
Faith Matcham;
Katie M White;
Carolin Oetzmann;
Alina Ivan;
Femke Lamers;
Sara Siddi;
Sara Simblett;
Aki Rintala;
David C Mohr;
Inez Myin-Germeys;
Til Wykes;
Josep Maria Haro;
Brenda WJH Penninx;
Vaibhav A Narayan;
Peter Annas;
Matthew Hotopf;
Richard JB Dobson;
RADAR-CNS consortium
ABSTRACT
Background:
Gait is an essential manifestation of depression. Laboratory gait characteristics have been found to be closely associated with depression. However, the gait characteristics of daily walking in real-world scenarios and their relationships with depression are yet to be fully explored.
Objective:
This study aimed to explore associations between depression symptom severity and daily-life gait characteristics derived from acceleration signals gathered by wearables and mobile phones in real-world settings.
Methods:
In this study, we used two ambulatory datasets: a public dataset with 71 elder adults’ 3-day acceleration signals collected by a wearable device, and a subset of an EU longitudinal depression study with 215 participants and their phone-collected acceleration signals (average 463 hours per participant). We detected participants’ gait cycles and force from raw acceleration signals and extracted twelve statistics-based daily-life gait features to describe the distribution and variance of gait cadence and force over a long-term period corresponding to the self-reported depression score.
Results:
The higher depression symptom severity was found to be significantly associated with lower gait cadence of high-performance walking (faster walking segments) over a long-term period. Long-term daily-life gait features could significantly improve the goodness of fit of predicting depression severity relative to laboratory gait patterns and demographics.
Conclusions:
This study indicated that the significant links between daily-life walking characteristics and depression symptom severity could be captured by both wearable devices and mobile phones. The gait cadence of high-performance walking has the potential to be an indicator for monitoring depression, which may contribute to developing clinical tools to remotely monitor mental health in real-world settings.
Citation
Please cite as:
Zhang Y, Folarin AA, Sun S, Cummins N, Vairavan S, Qian L, Ranjan Y, Rashid Z, Conde P, Stewart C, Laiou P, Sankesara H, Matcham F, White KM, Oetzmann C, Ivan A, Lamers F, Siddi S, Simblett S, Rintala A, Mohr DC, Myin-Germeys I, Wykes T, Haro JM, Penninx BW, Narayan VA, Annas P, Hotopf M, Dobson RJ, RADAR-CNS consortium
Associations Between Depression Symptom Severity and Daily-Life Gait Characteristics Derived From Long-Term Acceleration Signals in Real-World Settings: Retrospective Analysis