logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Free-living wrist and hip accelerometry forecast cognitive decline among older adults without dementia over 1- or 5-years in two distinct observational cohorts

Medicine and Health

Free-living wrist and hip accelerometry forecast cognitive decline among older adults without dementia over 1- or 5-years in two distinct observational cohorts

C. Shi, N. Babiker, et al.

This groundbreaking study uncovers how free-living accelerometry data can predict cognitive decline in older adults without dementia, achieving impressive accuracy levels. Conducted by leading researchers, including Chengjian Shi and Andrey Rzhetsky, the work highlights innovative methods that could transform clinical practices.

00:00
00:00
Playback language: English
Abstract
This study used free-living accelerometry data to forecast cognitive decline in older adults without dementia. Two cohorts were used: one with hip accelerometers (7 days of continuous wear) and one with wrist accelerometers (72 hours of continuous wear). Classifier models predicted 1-year cognitive decline with over 85% accuracy using hip data and 5-year decline with nearly 70% accuracy using wrist data, exceeding the accuracy of models using demographics and comorbidities alone. The models show promise for clinical translation.
Publisher
npj Aging
Published On
Jun 06, 2022
Authors
Chengjian Shi, Niser Babiker, Jacek K. Urbanek, Robert L. Grossman, Megan Huisingh-Scheetz, Andrey Rzhetsky
Tags
cognitive decline
accelerometry
older adults
machine learning
predictive modeling
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny