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Feasibility of Digital Memory Assessments in an Unsupervised and Remote Study Setting

Sensitive and frequent digital remote memory assessments via mobile devices hold the promise to facilitate the detection of cognitive impairment and decline. However, in order to be successful at scale, cognitive tests need to be applicable in unsupervised settings and confounding factors need to be...

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Autores principales: Berron, David, Ziegler, Gabriel, Vieweg, Paula, Billette, Ornella, Güsten, Jeremie, Grande, Xenia, Heneka, Michael T., Schneider, Anja, Teipel, Stefan, Jessen, Frank, Wagner, Michael, Düzel, Emrah
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9199443/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35721797
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fdgth.2022.892997
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author Berron, David
Ziegler, Gabriel
Vieweg, Paula
Billette, Ornella
Güsten, Jeremie
Grande, Xenia
Heneka, Michael T.
Schneider, Anja
Teipel, Stefan
Jessen, Frank
Wagner, Michael
Düzel, Emrah
author_facet Berron, David
Ziegler, Gabriel
Vieweg, Paula
Billette, Ornella
Güsten, Jeremie
Grande, Xenia
Heneka, Michael T.
Schneider, Anja
Teipel, Stefan
Jessen, Frank
Wagner, Michael
Düzel, Emrah
author_sort Berron, David
collection PubMed
description Sensitive and frequent digital remote memory assessments via mobile devices hold the promise to facilitate the detection of cognitive impairment and decline. However, in order to be successful at scale, cognitive tests need to be applicable in unsupervised settings and confounding factors need to be understood. This study explored the feasibility of completely unsupervised digital cognitive assessments using three novel memory tasks in a Citizen Science project across Germany. To that end, the study aimed to identify factors associated with stronger participant retention, to examine test-retest reliability and the extent of practice effects, as well as to investigate the influence of uncontrolled settings such as time of day, delay between sessions or screen size on memory performance. A total of 1,407 adults (aged 18–89) participated in the study for up to 12 weeks, completing weekly memory tasks in addition to short questionnaires regarding sleep duration, subjective cognitive complaints as well as cold symptoms. Participation across memory tasks was pseudorandomized such that individuals were assigned to one of three memory paradigms resulting in three otherwise identical sub-studies. One hundred thirty-eight participants contributed to two of the three paradigms. Critically, for each memory task 12 independent parallel test sets were used to minimize effects of repeated testing. First, we observed a mean participant retention time of 44 days, or 4 active test sessions, and 77.5% compliance to the study protocol in an unsupervised setting with no contact between participants and study personnel, payment or feedback. We identified subject-level factors that contributed to higher retention times. Second, we found minor practice effects associated with repeated cognitive testing, and reveal evidence for acceptable-to-good retest reliability of mobile testing. Third, we show that memory performance assessed through repeated digital assessments was strongly associated with age in all paradigms, and individuals with subjectively reported cognitive decline presented lower mnemonic discrimination accuracy compared to non-complaining participants. Finally, we identified design-related factors that need to be incorporated in future studies such as the time delay between test sessions. Our results demonstrate the feasibility of fully unsupervised digital remote memory assessments and identify critical factors to account for in future studies.
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spelling pubmed-91994432022-06-16 Feasibility of Digital Memory Assessments in an Unsupervised and Remote Study Setting Berron, David Ziegler, Gabriel Vieweg, Paula Billette, Ornella Güsten, Jeremie Grande, Xenia Heneka, Michael T. Schneider, Anja Teipel, Stefan Jessen, Frank Wagner, Michael Düzel, Emrah Front Digit Health Digital Health Sensitive and frequent digital remote memory assessments via mobile devices hold the promise to facilitate the detection of cognitive impairment and decline. However, in order to be successful at scale, cognitive tests need to be applicable in unsupervised settings and confounding factors need to be understood. This study explored the feasibility of completely unsupervised digital cognitive assessments using three novel memory tasks in a Citizen Science project across Germany. To that end, the study aimed to identify factors associated with stronger participant retention, to examine test-retest reliability and the extent of practice effects, as well as to investigate the influence of uncontrolled settings such as time of day, delay between sessions or screen size on memory performance. A total of 1,407 adults (aged 18–89) participated in the study for up to 12 weeks, completing weekly memory tasks in addition to short questionnaires regarding sleep duration, subjective cognitive complaints as well as cold symptoms. Participation across memory tasks was pseudorandomized such that individuals were assigned to one of three memory paradigms resulting in three otherwise identical sub-studies. One hundred thirty-eight participants contributed to two of the three paradigms. Critically, for each memory task 12 independent parallel test sets were used to minimize effects of repeated testing. First, we observed a mean participant retention time of 44 days, or 4 active test sessions, and 77.5% compliance to the study protocol in an unsupervised setting with no contact between participants and study personnel, payment or feedback. We identified subject-level factors that contributed to higher retention times. Second, we found minor practice effects associated with repeated cognitive testing, and reveal evidence for acceptable-to-good retest reliability of mobile testing. Third, we show that memory performance assessed through repeated digital assessments was strongly associated with age in all paradigms, and individuals with subjectively reported cognitive decline presented lower mnemonic discrimination accuracy compared to non-complaining participants. Finally, we identified design-related factors that need to be incorporated in future studies such as the time delay between test sessions. Our results demonstrate the feasibility of fully unsupervised digital remote memory assessments and identify critical factors to account for in future studies. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-05-26 /pmc/articles/PMC9199443/ /pubmed/35721797 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fdgth.2022.892997 Text en Copyright © 2022 Berron, Ziegler, Vieweg, Billette, Güsten, Grande, Heneka, Schneider, Teipel, Jessen, Wagner and Düzel. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Digital Health
Berron, David
Ziegler, Gabriel
Vieweg, Paula
Billette, Ornella
Güsten, Jeremie
Grande, Xenia
Heneka, Michael T.
Schneider, Anja
Teipel, Stefan
Jessen, Frank
Wagner, Michael
Düzel, Emrah
Feasibility of Digital Memory Assessments in an Unsupervised and Remote Study Setting
title Feasibility of Digital Memory Assessments in an Unsupervised and Remote Study Setting
title_full Feasibility of Digital Memory Assessments in an Unsupervised and Remote Study Setting
title_fullStr Feasibility of Digital Memory Assessments in an Unsupervised and Remote Study Setting
title_full_unstemmed Feasibility of Digital Memory Assessments in an Unsupervised and Remote Study Setting
title_short Feasibility of Digital Memory Assessments in an Unsupervised and Remote Study Setting
title_sort feasibility of digital memory assessments in an unsupervised and remote study setting
topic Digital Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9199443/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35721797
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fdgth.2022.892997
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