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Response Time Dynamics From Noncognitive Ordinal Ecological Momentary Assessment as a Proxy for Symptom Change in Geriatric Depression: Longitudinal Observational Study

Authors
 Lee, Jooho  ;  Lee, Jeehang  ;  Park, Sehwan  ;  Do, Gangho  ;  Noh, Jihye  ;  Moon, Sangjoon  ;  Chung, Kyungmi  ;  Son, Sang Joon  ;  Park, Jin Young 
Citation
 JMIR AGING, Vol.9, 2026-05 
Article Number
 e83891 
Journal Title
 JMIR AGING 
ISSN
 2561-7605 
Issue Date
2026-05
MeSH
Aged ; Aged, 80 and over ; Depression* / diagnosis ; Depression* / psychology ; Ecological Momentary Assessment* ; Female ; Geriatric Assessment* / methods ; Humans ; Independent Living ; Longitudinal Studies ; Major Depressive Disorder* / diagnosis ; Major Depressive Disorder* / psychology ; Male ; Psychiatric Status Rating Scales
Keywords
ecological momentary assessment ; response time ; digital biomarkers ; geriatric depression ; Bayesian multilevel modeling ; self-monitoring ; mobile health
Abstract
Background:Depressive symptoms in older adults are amplified by social isolation and limited access to clinic-based mental health care. Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) enables remote self-monitoring and unobtrusively captures response times (RTs), which may serve as indicators of psychomotor and cognitive functioning. Objective:This study investigated the use of EMA-based RT dynamics for predicting symptom change and profiling potential responders for repeated self-monitoring in late-life depression. Methods:Forty-nine community-dwelling adults aged 65 years or older (mean age 70.7, SD 5.8 years; female: 35; male: 14) with a history of major depressive disorder received case management incorporating daily EMA. Participants provided self-reports of mood, appetite, sleep quality, and general well-being. Preassessment and postassessment included the 15-item Short Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS-15), the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale-Revised (CESD-R), the 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire, and the Beck Anxiety Inventory. RTs were cleaned with an asymmetric IQR rule, z standardized within-person & times; response level, and modeled with exponential decay curves over successive EMA trials. The efficacy of EMA-adjunctive care was evaluated using pre-post comparisons of symptom scales. We then examined associations between RT-derived features and symptom change using correlational analyses. Finally, Bayesian multilevel modeling was applied to assess the clinical relevance of RT dynamics, including group differences in adaptation patterns. Results:Older adults at risk for depression showed significant symptom reductions over the 4-week EMA-adjunctive care period across all 4 psychological scales (CESD-R: mean Delta 11.5; rank-biserial r=0.78; GDS-15: mean Delta 2.14, Cohen d=0.76), alongside high EMA adherence (>90%). In correlational analyses, descriptive EMA score metrics and raw RTs showed modest, symptom-specific associations with symptom change (Delta CESD-R: |r|approximate to 0.29; Delta 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire: |r|approximate to 0.32; Delta Beck Anxiety Inventory: |r|approximate to 0.35) but were not significantly related to change in geriatric depression (Delta GDS-15: |r|approximate to 0.24). In contrast, exponential-decay model parameters derived from standardized RT were significantly associated with geriatric depressive symptom change (Delta GDS-15), with the strongest effects observed for the feeling item (eg, decay rate theta(b): r=-0.398, asymptote theta(c): r=-0.321). Bayesian multilevel modeling further indicated that EMA-adjunctive care responders showed faster RT adaptation than nonresponders (median decay-rate ratio approximate to 4.9, 95% credible interval 1.44-14.31), whereas differences in postadaptation RT levels were smaller and uncertain (median postadaptation RT ratio approximate to 1.25, 95% credible interval 0.95-1.58). Sensitivity analyses showed consistent decay-rate effects across alternative specifications. Conclusions:Dynamic characteristics of EMA-based RTs emerged as a sensitive proxy for monitoring changes in depressive symptoms among older adults at risk. These findings highlight the potential use of RTs as digital biomarkers derived from brief, low-burden EMA self-monitoring, supporting the development of scalable and personalized mental health interventions for geriatric populations.
DOI
10.2196/83891
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Psychiatry (정신과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Park, Jin Young(박진영) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5351-9549
Chung, Kyungmi(정경미) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2754-7631
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/212562
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