Litcius/Paper detail

GPS Tracking Technologies to Measure Mobility-Related Behaviors in Community-Dwelling Older Adults: A Systematic Review

Jane Chung, Lana Sargent, Roy Brown, Tracey Gendron, David C. Wheeler

2020Journal of Applied Gerontology21 citationsDOI

Abstract

Global positioning system (GPS) technology has been increasingly used in aging research as a tool for reliably capturing the level and patterns of mobility among older adults. This article aims to systematically review the current state of GPS-based mobility research with community-dwelling older adults. Twenty-nine studies from 2008 to 2019 are included. Included studies examined various forms of temporal and spatial mobility measures. This review provides a synthesis of the current evidence on the risk factors or correlates of GPS-driven mobility limitations, such as demographic, cognitive, physical, psychological, and environmental factors. There is variability in types of GPS technology and GPS-derived mobility measures, GPS recording methods, data processing, and correlates of mobility limitation across studies. Future research should focus on identifying meaningful GPS-derived mobility measures and developing standardized protocols for GPS administration and data analytics for comparison across studies.

Topics & Concepts

Global Positioning SystemTracking (education)Computer sciencePsychologyTelecommunicationsPedagogyOlder Adults Driving StudiesUrban Transport and AccessibilityHealth disparities and outcomes
GPS Tracking Technologies to Measure Mobility-Related Behaviors in Community-Dwelling Older Adults: A Systematic Review | Litcius