Abstract

Conventional one-time gait analyses do not evaluate walking across more than a few steps, cannot monitor changes longitudinally, and do not reflect performance in real-life environments. To successfully quantify age-related gait decrement, technology that can continuously monitor gait is vital. This study examined the feasibility and validity for participant smartphones to remotely assess gait. In addition, the authors investigated whether smartphone-derived measures could differentiate between young and older adults (fallers and nonfallers). A total of 63 adults completed clinical and gait assessment in the laboratory and donned their smartphones for 3 days in the real-life environment. A custom-built Android application collected triaxial accelerations with spatiotemporal gait measures computed and compared between groups. Across 11 brands and 10 Android versions, smartphone-derived gait parameters were valid. Furthermore, results indicated age-related differences in walking during the 3-day assessment. However, no disparities were found between older adult groups. Smartphone-based evaluations may improve real-life screening of adults with gait deficits.

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