The Relation Between Passively Collected GPS Mobility Metrics and Depressive Symptoms: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Nov 1, 2024Journal of medical Internet research

How Passive GPS Movement Data Relates to Depression Symptoms: A Review and Analysis

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Abstract

Analysis of 19 studies with 2,930 participants revealed significant between-person correlations between GPS features and depression.

  • A negative correlation was found between distance traveled and depressive symptoms (r=-0.25).
  • Normalized entropy, location variance, and entropy also showed negative correlations with depression (r=-0.17 and r=-0.13 respectively).
  • The number of clusters correlated negatively with depressive symptoms (r=-0.11), while more homestay time was associated with higher depression scores (r=0.10).
  • Three studies reporting within-person correlations were too diverse to conduct a meta-analysis.
  • Most studies lacked rigorous quality standards, with 79% underpowered to detect small correlations.
  • Evidence of potential publication bias was identified in the reviewed studies.

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