# Utility of Digital Technology for Ambulatory Assessment of Exposures and Health in Older Adults

**Authors:** Carol Derby, Mindy Katz, Lesley Ross

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.1886 · Innovation in Aging · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

Digital tools like wearables and smartphones help track health and environments of older adults in real time, even during events like the pandemic.

## Contribution

The paper introduces an integrative approach combining ambulatory digital assessments with traditional clinic methods for cognitive aging research.

## Key findings

- Digital methods enable ongoing follow-up of older adults during events like pandemics.
- GPS data can capture individual-specific neighborhood exposure patterns.
- Real-time data helps understand how glucose regulation affects cognition in older adults with diabetes.

## Abstract

Digital technologies including wearable censors and smartphones facilitate the real-time assessment of psychological and physiologic states, behavioral patterns, and cognitive functioning, as well as person-level environmental exposures in the course of daily life. Further, these methods allow for continuing follow-up of older adults when in-person assessments are not possible, such as during infectious disease outbreaks, or when older adults are not able to travel to a study clinic. This session will illustrate the application of digital technology to the study of cognitive aging within the Einstein Aging Study (EAS) cohort of community residing adults. The EAS utilizes an integrative approach that combines ecologically valid ambulatory measures of both exposures and cognition with traditional clinic-based assessments in a diverse community-based sample of adults aged 60 and above. The session will illustrate the feasibility and utility of this approach for: 1) maintaining ongoing follow-up in older adults and obtaining real-time longitudinal data during environmental events (Dr. Roque), 2) using GPS data to derive person-specific indices of neighborhood environment exposures as individuals navigate everyday life (Dr. Hyun), 3) understanding how glucose regulation impacts cognition in older adults with diabetes (Dr. Hoogendoorn), 4) examining real time associations between subjective cognitive concerns and cognitive performance (Dr. Garcia De La Garza), and 5) prospectively tracking psychological health during the COVID-19 pandemic (Dr. Wang).

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** diabetes (MONDO:0005015), infectious disease (MONDO:0005550), COVID-19 (MONDO:0100096)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12763077