HCLGJul 31, 2024

A State-of-the-Art Review of Computational Models for Analyzing Longitudinal Wearable Sensor Data in Healthcare

arXiv:2407.21665v11 citationsh-index: 5
Originality Synthesis-oriented
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It provides a review for researchers and practitioners in healthcare and computational modeling, focusing on incremental insights from existing models.

This paper reviews computational models for analyzing longitudinal wearable sensor data in healthcare, addressing challenges in modeling and processing such data to enable predictive and personalized medicine, but does not present new experimental results or concrete numbers.

Wearable devices are increasingly used as tools for biomedical research, as the continuous stream of behavioral and physiological data they collect can provide insights about our health in everyday contexts. Long-term tracking, defined in the timescale of months of year, can provide insights of patterns and changes as indicators of health changes. These insights can make medicine and healthcare more predictive, preventive, personalized, and participative (The 4P's). However, the challenges in modeling, understanding and processing longitudinal data are a significant barrier to their adoption in research studies and clinical settings. In this paper, we review and discuss three models used to make sense of longitudinal data: routines, rhythms and stability metrics. We present the challenges associated with the processing and analysis of longitudinal wearable sensor data, with a special focus on how to handle the different temporal dynamics at various granularities. We then discuss current limitations and identify directions for future work. This review is essential to the advancement of computational modeling and analysis of longitudinal sensor data for pervasive healthcare.

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