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      Dynamic Digital Biomarkers of Motor and Cognitive Function in Parkinson's Disease.

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          Abstract

          As Parkinson's disease (PD) is a heterogeneous disorder, personalized medicine is truly required to optimize care. In their current form, standard scores from paper and pencil symptom- measures traditionally used to track disease progression are too coarse (discrete) to capture the granularity of the clinical phenomena under consideration, in the face of tremendous symptom diversity. For this reason, sensors, wearables, and mobile devices are increasingly incorporated into PD research and routine care. These digital measures, while more precise, yield data that are less standardized and interpretable than traditional measures, and consequently, the two types of data remain largely siloed. Both of these issues present barriers to the broad clinical application of the field's most precise assessment tools. This protocol addresses both problems. Using traditional tasks to measure cognition and motor control, we test the participant, while co-registering biophysical signals unobtrusively using wearables. We then integrate the scores from traditional paper-and-pencil methods with the digital data that we continuously register. We offer a new standardized data type and unifying statistical platform that enables the dynamic tracking of change in the person's stochastic signatures under different conditions that probe different functional levels of neuromotor control, ranging from voluntary to autonomic. The protocol and standardized statistical framework offer dynamic digital biomarkers of physical and cognitive function in PD that correspond to validated clinical scales, while significantly improving their precision.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Vis Exp
          Journal of visualized experiments : JoVE
          MyJove Corporation
          1940-087X
          1940-087X
          July 24 2019
          : 149
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Psychology, Rutgers University; Rutgers University Center for Cognitive Science, Rutgers University.
          [2 ] Department of Psychology, Rutgers University.
          [3 ] Rutgers-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Department of Psychiatry, Rutgers University.
          [4 ] Department of Psychology, Rutgers University; Rutgers University Center for Cognitive Science, Rutgers University; Center for Biomedicine, Imaging and Modelling, Department of Computer Science, Rutgers University; ebtorres@psych.rutgers.edu.
          Article
          10.3791/59827
          31403620
          63dbc0c5-8513-4c51-b709-698254c29778
          History

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