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Specific associations of passively sensed smartphone data with future symptoms of avoidance, fear, and physiological distress in social anxiety

BACKGROUND: Prior literature links passively sensed information about a person's location, movement, and communication with social anxiety. These findings hold promise for identifying novel treatment targets, informing clinical care, and personalizing digital mental health interventions. Howeve...

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Autores principales: Stamatis, Caitlin A., Liu, Tingting, Meyerhoff, Jonah, Meng, Yixuan, Cho, Young Min, Karr, Chris J., Curtis, Brenda L., Ungar, Lyle H., Mohr, David C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10589746/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37867614
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.invent.2023.100683
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author Stamatis, Caitlin A.
Liu, Tingting
Meyerhoff, Jonah
Meng, Yixuan
Cho, Young Min
Karr, Chris J.
Curtis, Brenda L.
Ungar, Lyle H.
Mohr, David C.
author_facet Stamatis, Caitlin A.
Liu, Tingting
Meyerhoff, Jonah
Meng, Yixuan
Cho, Young Min
Karr, Chris J.
Curtis, Brenda L.
Ungar, Lyle H.
Mohr, David C.
author_sort Stamatis, Caitlin A.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Prior literature links passively sensed information about a person's location, movement, and communication with social anxiety. These findings hold promise for identifying novel treatment targets, informing clinical care, and personalizing digital mental health interventions. However, social anxiety symptoms are heterogeneous; to identify more precise targets and tailor treatments, there is a need for personal sensing studies aimed at understanding differential predictors of the distinct subdomains of social anxiety. Our objective was to conduct a large-scale smartphone-based sensing study of fear, avoidance, and physiological symptoms in the context of trait social anxiety over time. METHODS: Participants (n = 1013; 74.6 % female; M age = 40.9) downloaded the LifeSense app, which collected continuous passive data (e.g., GPS, communication, app and device use) over 16 weeks. We tested a series of multilevel linear regression models to understand within- and between-person associations of 2-week windows of passively sensed smartphone data with fear, avoidance, and physiological distress on the self-reported Social Phobia Inventory (SPIN). A shifting sensor lag was applied to examine how smartphone features related to SPIN subdomains 2 weeks in the future (distal prediction), 1 week in the future (medial prediction), and 0 weeks in the future (proximal prediction). RESULTS: A decrease in time visiting novel places was a strong between-person predictor of social avoidance over time (distal β = −0.886, p = .002; medial β = −0.647, p = .029; proximal β = −0.818, p = .007). Reductions in call- and text-based communications were associated with social avoidance at both the between- (distal β = −0.882, p = .002; medial β = −0.932, p = .001; proximal β = −0.918, p = .001) and within- (distal β = −0.191, p = .046; medial β = −0.213, p = .028) person levels, as well as between-person fear of social situations (distal β = −0.860, p < .001; medial β = −0.892, p < .001; proximal β = −0.886, p < .001) over time. There were fewer significant associations of sensed data with physiological distress. Across the three subscales, smartphone data explained 9–12 % of the variance in social anxiety. CONCLUSION: Findings have implications for understanding how social anxiety manifests in daily life, and for personalizing treatments. For example, a signal that someone is likely to begin avoiding social situations may suggest a need for alternative types of exposure-based interventions compared to a signal that someone is likely to begin experiencing increased physiological distress. Our results suggest that as a prophylactic means of targeting social avoidance, it may be helpful to deploy interventions involving social exposures in response to decreases in time spent visiting novel places.
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spelling pubmed-105897462023-10-22 Specific associations of passively sensed smartphone data with future symptoms of avoidance, fear, and physiological distress in social anxiety Stamatis, Caitlin A. Liu, Tingting Meyerhoff, Jonah Meng, Yixuan Cho, Young Min Karr, Chris J. Curtis, Brenda L. Ungar, Lyle H. Mohr, David C. Internet Interv Full length Article BACKGROUND: Prior literature links passively sensed information about a person's location, movement, and communication with social anxiety. These findings hold promise for identifying novel treatment targets, informing clinical care, and personalizing digital mental health interventions. However, social anxiety symptoms are heterogeneous; to identify more precise targets and tailor treatments, there is a need for personal sensing studies aimed at understanding differential predictors of the distinct subdomains of social anxiety. Our objective was to conduct a large-scale smartphone-based sensing study of fear, avoidance, and physiological symptoms in the context of trait social anxiety over time. METHODS: Participants (n = 1013; 74.6 % female; M age = 40.9) downloaded the LifeSense app, which collected continuous passive data (e.g., GPS, communication, app and device use) over 16 weeks. We tested a series of multilevel linear regression models to understand within- and between-person associations of 2-week windows of passively sensed smartphone data with fear, avoidance, and physiological distress on the self-reported Social Phobia Inventory (SPIN). A shifting sensor lag was applied to examine how smartphone features related to SPIN subdomains 2 weeks in the future (distal prediction), 1 week in the future (medial prediction), and 0 weeks in the future (proximal prediction). RESULTS: A decrease in time visiting novel places was a strong between-person predictor of social avoidance over time (distal β = −0.886, p = .002; medial β = −0.647, p = .029; proximal β = −0.818, p = .007). Reductions in call- and text-based communications were associated with social avoidance at both the between- (distal β = −0.882, p = .002; medial β = −0.932, p = .001; proximal β = −0.918, p = .001) and within- (distal β = −0.191, p = .046; medial β = −0.213, p = .028) person levels, as well as between-person fear of social situations (distal β = −0.860, p < .001; medial β = −0.892, p < .001; proximal β = −0.886, p < .001) over time. There were fewer significant associations of sensed data with physiological distress. Across the three subscales, smartphone data explained 9–12 % of the variance in social anxiety. CONCLUSION: Findings have implications for understanding how social anxiety manifests in daily life, and for personalizing treatments. For example, a signal that someone is likely to begin avoiding social situations may suggest a need for alternative types of exposure-based interventions compared to a signal that someone is likely to begin experiencing increased physiological distress. Our results suggest that as a prophylactic means of targeting social avoidance, it may be helpful to deploy interventions involving social exposures in response to decreases in time spent visiting novel places. Elsevier 2023-10-13 /pmc/articles/PMC10589746/ /pubmed/37867614 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.invent.2023.100683 Text en © 2023 Published by Elsevier B.V. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Full length Article
Stamatis, Caitlin A.
Liu, Tingting
Meyerhoff, Jonah
Meng, Yixuan
Cho, Young Min
Karr, Chris J.
Curtis, Brenda L.
Ungar, Lyle H.
Mohr, David C.
Specific associations of passively sensed smartphone data with future symptoms of avoidance, fear, and physiological distress in social anxiety
title Specific associations of passively sensed smartphone data with future symptoms of avoidance, fear, and physiological distress in social anxiety
title_full Specific associations of passively sensed smartphone data with future symptoms of avoidance, fear, and physiological distress in social anxiety
title_fullStr Specific associations of passively sensed smartphone data with future symptoms of avoidance, fear, and physiological distress in social anxiety
title_full_unstemmed Specific associations of passively sensed smartphone data with future symptoms of avoidance, fear, and physiological distress in social anxiety
title_short Specific associations of passively sensed smartphone data with future symptoms of avoidance, fear, and physiological distress in social anxiety
title_sort specific associations of passively sensed smartphone data with future symptoms of avoidance, fear, and physiological distress in social anxiety
topic Full length Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10589746/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37867614
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.invent.2023.100683
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