Analysis of the 24-Hour Activity Cycle: An illustration examining the association with cognitive function in the Adult Changes in Thought (ACT) Study
Yinxiang Wu, Dori E. Rosenberg, Mikael Anne Greenwood-Hickman, Susan, M. McCurry, Cecile Proust-Lima, Jennifer C. Nelson, Paul K. Crane, Andrea Z., LaCroix, Eric B. Larson, Pamela A. Shaw

TL;DR
This study compares three analytical methods—ISM, CoDA, and LPA—for modeling the 24-hour activity cycle's association with cognitive function in older adults, highlighting their assumptions, challenges, and interpretation guidance.
Contribution
It provides a comparative illustration of three approaches to analyze 24HAC data and their implications for understanding health outcomes, specifically cognitive function.
Findings
No significant association between activity patterns and cognitive scores.
Different methods offer varied insights into activity behavior classifications.
Guidance on selecting appropriate analytical approaches based on research questions.
Abstract
The 24-hour activity cycle (24HAC) is a new paradigm for studying activity behaviors in relation to health outcomes. This approach captures the interrelatedness of the daily time spent in physical activity (PA), sedentary behavior (SB), and sleep. We illustrate and compare the use of three popular approaches, namely isotemporal substitution model (ISM), compositional data analysis (CoDA), and latent profile analysis (LPA) for modeling outcome associations with the 24HAC. We apply these approaches to assess an association with a cognitive outcome, measured by CASI item response theory (IRT) score, in a cohort of 1034 older adults (mean [range] age = 77 [65-100]; 55.8% female; 90% White) who were part of the Adult Changes in Thought (ACT) Activity Monitoring (ACT-AM) sub-study. PA and SB were assessed with thigh-worn activPAL accelerometers for 7 days. We highlight differences in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth, Environment, Cognitive Aging · Nutritional Studies and Diet · Mental Health Research Topics
