CARE as a wearable derived feature linking circadian amplitude to human cognitive functions

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

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Author(s)

  • Shuya Cui
  • Qingmin Lin
  • Yuanyuan Gui
  • Yunting Zhang
  • Hui Lu
  • Hongyu Zhao
  • Xiaolei Wang
  • Fan Jiang

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Detail(s)

Original languageEnglish
Article number123
Journal / Publicationnpj Digital Medicine
Volume6
Online published11 Jul 2023
Publication statusPublished - 2023

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Abstract

Circadian rhythms are crucial for regulating physiological and behavioral processes. Pineal hormone melatonin is often used to measure circadian amplitude but its collection is costly and time-consuming. Wearable activity data are promising alternative, but the most commonly used measure, relative amplitude, is subject to behavioral masking. In this study, we firstly derive a feature named circadian activity rhythm energy (CARE) to better characterize circadian amplitude and validate CARE by correlating it with melatonin amplitude (Pearson’s r = 0.46, P = 0.007) among 33 healthy participants. Then we investigate its association with cognitive functions in an adolescent dataset (Chinese SCHEDULE-A, n = 1703) and an adult dataset (UK Biobank, n = 92,202), and find that CARE is significantly associated with Global Executive Composite (β = 30.86, P = 0.016) in adolescents, and reasoning ability, short-term memory, and prospective memory (OR = 0.01, 3.42, and 11.47 respectively, all P < 0.001) in adults. Finally, we identify one genetic locus with 126 CARE-associated SNPs using the genome-wide association study, of which 109 variants are used as instrumental variables in the Mendelian Randomization analysis, and the results show a significant causal effect of CARE on reasoning ability, short-term memory, and prospective memory (β = -59.91, 7.94, and 16.85 respectively, all P < 0.0001). The present study suggests that CARE is an effective wearable-based metric of circadian amplitude with a strong genetic basis and clinical significance, and its adoption can facilitate future circadian studies and potential intervention strategies to improve circadian rhythms and cognitive functions. © The Author(s) 2023

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Citation Format(s)

CARE as a wearable derived feature linking circadian amplitude to human cognitive functions. / Cui, Shuya; Lin, Qingmin; Gui, Yuanyuan et al.
In: npj Digital Medicine, Vol. 6, 123, 2023.

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

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