Examining Human-Smartphone Interaction as a Proxy for Circadian Rhythm in Patients With Insomnia: Cross-Sectional Study

Dec 15, 2023Journal of medical Internet research

Using Smartphone Interaction to Reflect Daily Body Clock Patterns in People with Insomnia

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Abstract

A total of 2097 person-days were recorded using a mobile app to analyze sleep and circadian rhythms in individuals with insomnia and healthy controls.

  • App-defined and actigraphy-derived sleep indicators showed no significant differences in measures like sleep onset and wake times.
  • Patients with insomnia exhibited prolonged wake after sleep onset, increased number of awakenings, and delayed sleep onset and wake times compared to healthy controls.
  • Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index scores were positively correlated with wake after sleep onset and number of awakenings, regardless of measurement method.
  • Depressive symptom scores were positively correlated with app-defined intradaily variability and negatively correlated with actigraphy-based relative amplitude, suggesting disrupted circadian rhythms in individuals with depression.
  • App-defined relative amplitude did not show a significant correlation with depressive symptoms, indicating potential differences in how smartphone data and actigraphy reflect mood.

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