Litcius/Paper detail

A Call to Expand the Scope of Digital Phenotyping

Christopher De Boer, Hassan Ghomrawi, Suhail Zeineddin, Samuel Linton, Soyang Kwon, Fizan Abdullah

2022Journal of Medical Internet Research18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Digital phenotyping refers to near-real-time data collection from personal digital devices, particularly smartphones, to better quantify the human phenotype. Methodology using smartphones is often considered the gold standard by many for passive data collection within the field of digital phenotyping, which limits its applications mainly to adults or adolescents who use smartphones. However, other technologies, such as wearable devices, have evolved considerably in recent years to provide similar or better quality passive physiologic data of clinical relevance, thus expanding the potential of digital phenotyping applications to other patient populations. In this perspective, we argue for the continued expansion of digital phenotyping to include other potential gold standards in addition to smartphones and provide examples of currently excluded technologies and populations who may uniquely benefit from this technology.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceDigital healthData scienceScope (computer science)Wearable technologyRelevance (law)Wearable computerData collectionPerspective (graphical)Internet privacyHealth careArtificial intelligenceEmbedded systemMathematicsLawStatisticsProgramming languagePolitical scienceEconomicsEconomic growthHealth Policy Implementation ScienceEthics in Clinical Research