JMIR Formative Research (Sep 2022)

Measuring Daily Activity Rhythms in Young Adults at Risk of Affective Instability Using Passively Collected Smartphone Data: Observational Study

  • Benny Ren,
  • Cedric Huchuan Xia,
  • Philip Gehrman,
  • Ian Barnett,
  • Theodore Satterthwaite

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/33890
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 9
p. e33890

Abstract

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BackgroundIrregularities in circadian rhythms have been associated with adverse health outcomes. The regularity of rhythms can be quantified using passively collected smartphone data to provide clinically relevant biomarkers of routine. ObjectiveThis study aims to develop a metric to quantify the regularity of activity rhythms and explore the relationship between routine and mood, as well as demographic covariates, in an outpatient psychiatric cohort. MethodsPassively sensed smartphone data from a cohort of 38 young adults from the Penn or Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Lifespan Brain Institute and Outpatient Psychiatry Clinic at the University of Pennsylvania were fitted with 2-state continuous-time hidden Markov models representing active and resting states. The regularity of routine was modeled as the hour-of-the-day random effects on the probability of state transition (ie, the association between the hour-of-the-day and state membership). A regularity score, Activity Rhythm Metric, was calculated from the continuous-time hidden Markov models and regressed on clinical and demographic covariates. ResultsRegular activity rhythms were associated with longer sleep durations (P=.009), older age (P=.001), and mood (P=.049). ConclusionsPassively sensed Activity Rhythm Metrics are an alternative to existing metrics but do not require burdensome survey-based assessments. Low-burden, passively sensed metrics based on smartphone data are promising and scalable alternatives to traditional measurements.