The Dynamic Association Between Physical Activity and Psychological Symptoms in Young People With Major Depressive Disorder: An Active and Passive Sensing Longitudinal Cohort Study
Rosalind Baynham, Andres Camargo, Simon D'Alfonso, Tianyi Zhang, Zamantha Munoz, Pemma Davies, Mario Alvarez‐Jimenez, Niels van Berkel, Vassilis Kostakos, Lianne Schmaal, Scott D. Tagliaferri

TL;DR
This study explores how physical activity levels relate to psychological symptoms like stress and anxiety in young people with depression, using wearable sensors and daily assessments.
Contribution
The study provides novel insights into dynamic associations between physical activity intensity and psychological symptoms in young people with MDD using active and passive sensing.
Findings
Higher typical vigorous physical activity was linked to lower daily stress and higher positive affect.
Variability in light and moderate physical activity was positively associated with daily stress and anxiety.
Abstract
Physical activity could be associated with psychological symptoms in young people with major depressive disorder (MDD). Using actigraphy and ecological momentary assessment (EMA), we investigated the associations between physical activity and stress, anxiety and positive and negative affect in young people with MDD. Actigraphy and EMA were collected daily in 40 young participants (aged 16–25 years) with MDD over 8 weeks. Multi‐level linear mixed models were used to examine within‐ and between‐person daily associations between physical activity and symptoms of stress, depression and positive and negative affect. Participants with at least 14 days of complete data were included in the analysis (n participants = 22; total days = 598). Typical (defined as average across the assessment period) vigorous physical activity was significantly associated with lower daily stress (β[95% CI] =…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMental Health Research Topics · Eating Disorders and Behaviors · Treatment of Major Depression
