Assessment of cognitive function in bipolar disorder with passive smartphone keystroke metadata: a BiAffect digital phenotyping study.

IF 3.2 3区 医学 Q2 PSYCHIATRY
Frontiers in Psychiatry Pub Date : 2025-03-06 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1430303
Olusola Ajilore, John S Bark, Alexander P Demos, John Zulueta, Jonathan Stange, Jennifer Duffecy, Faraz Hussain, Scott A Langenecker, Peter Nelson, Kelly Ryan, Melvin G McInnis, Alex Leow
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Cognitive dysfunction in bipolar disorder persists in the euthymic state and has been shown to be associated with a number of negative sequelae including treatment resistance and increased risk of relapse. There has been recent attention on digital phenotyping and passive sensing through smart, connected devices to probe cognition in real-world settings. BiAffect is a custom-built smartphone keyboard that captures keystroke metadata ('how you type, not what you type'). In previous studies, our group has demonstrated that BiAffect-derived keystroke metadata is associated with cognitive domains like processing speed. For the present study, we hypothesized that typing metadata would be significantly associated with executive function and planning.

Methods: 18 participants with bipolar disorder and 12 healthy comparison participants from the Prechter Longitudinal Study of Bipolar Disorder at the University of Michigan were provided a mobile phone with a customized keyboard that passively collected keystroke metadata. Participants also completed a neuropsychological battery including the Tower of London task. Irregularities in typing and times to make a move on the Tower of London task were compared using sample and Shannon entropy, respectively.

Results: Participants with bipolar disorder had significant increases in entropy in typing (p = .005, d = -1.28) and entropy of Tower of London move times (p = .029, d = -.84). Furthermore, typing entropy was significantly associated with irregularity in Tower of London moves in participants (r = .59, p = .006), as well as variability of clinician-rated depressive symptoms and self-rated impulsive actions and feelings.

Conclusions: This pilot study demonstrates that passive, unobtrusive smartphone keystroke metadata can be used to probe cognitive function and dysfunction in bipolar disorder, revealing multi-scalar behavioral features accessible through digital assays.

背景:双相情感障碍患者的认知功能障碍在痊愈状态下依然存在,而且已被证明与一系列负面后遗症有关,包括治疗阻力和复发风险增加。最近,人们开始关注通过智能互联设备进行数字表型和被动传感,以探测真实世界环境中的认知情况。BiAffect 是一款定制的智能手机键盘,可捕捉按键元数据("您如何输入,而不是输入什么")。在之前的研究中,我们的研究小组已经证明,BiAffect 导出的按键元数据与处理速度等认知领域相关。方法:密歇根大学普雷希特双相情感障碍纵向研究(Prechter Longitudinal Study of Bipolar Disorder)的 18 名双相情感障碍参与者和 12 名健康对比参与者获得了一部带有定制键盘的手机,该键盘可被动收集击键元数据。参与者还完成了包括伦敦塔任务在内的神经心理测试。我们分别使用样本熵和香农熵对伦敦塔任务中的输入不规则性和移动时间进行了比较:结果:双相情感障碍患者的打字熵(p = .005,d = -1.28)和伦敦塔移动时间熵(p = .029,d = -.84)均显著增加。此外,打字熵与参与者伦敦塔移动的不规则性(r = .59,p = .006)以及临床医生评定的抑郁症状和自我评定的冲动行为和感觉的可变性有显著关联:这项试验性研究表明,被动的、非侵入性的智能手机按键元数据可用于探查双相情感障碍的认知功能和功能障碍,揭示通过数字检测可获得的多尺度行为特征。
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Psychiatry
Frontiers in Psychiatry Medicine-Psychiatry and Mental Health
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
8.50%
发文量
2813
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Psychiatry publishes rigorously peer-reviewed research across a wide spectrum of translational, basic and clinical research. Field Chief Editor Stefan Borgwardt at the University of Basel is supported by an outstanding Editorial Board of international researchers. This multidisciplinary open-access journal is at the forefront of disseminating and communicating scientific knowledge and impactful discoveries to researchers, academics, clinicians and the public worldwide. The journal''s mission is to use translational approaches to improve therapeutic options for mental illness and consequently to improve patient treatment outcomes.
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