Feasibility and Acceptability of a Smartphone and Wearable Assessment Protocol for Adolescents with Depression.
Article
Guo, Jenny, Frederick, Jennifer, Cunningham, Lindsey et al. (2026). Feasibility and Acceptability of a Smartphone and Wearable Assessment Protocol for Adolescents with Depression.
. Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology, 54(4), 78. 10.1007/s10802-026-01464-9
Guo, Jenny, Frederick, Jennifer, Cunningham, Lindsey et al. (2026). Feasibility and Acceptability of a Smartphone and Wearable Assessment Protocol for Adolescents with Depression.
. Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology, 54(4), 78. 10.1007/s10802-026-01464-9
Smartphones and wearables are low-burden tools for assessing real-time mood and behavior. Although these methods have been used with adolescents for behavioral tracking (e.g., activity, sleep), less is known about longer-term use (beyond one week) with adolescents with depression and about mobile sensing for monitoring mood for any adolescent population. This study examined acceptability and feasibility of a one-month EMA, actigraphy, and mobile sensing protocol for adolescents with elevated depressive symptoms. Adolescents aged 12 to 18 (N = 69; Mage = 15.46; 67% assigned female at birth; 42% White; 71% Hispanic or Latine; 38% sexual minority) completed EMA surveys on depressive symptoms, processes, and affect multiple times daily via a smartphone app that also collected passive sensor data (e.g., motion, geolocation). An actigraph measured physical activity and sleep. A feedback interview assessed protocol acceptability. Most participants (91%) completed all components, were willing to participate again (91%), and would recommend participation to peers (93%). EMA response rates improved (mean completion 57% to 66%) after shifting to a semi-personalized schedule with extended response windows. Actigraph wear time was high (> 70%) despite device-related issues. Sensor data availability varied by operating system, and privacy concerns influenced participation. Adherence was correlated within and between modalities, suggesting that individual compliance played a central role in consistent engagement. Findings support the feasibility and acceptability of smartphone and wearable methods for capturing real-world mood and behavior in adolescents, however careful attention to design, engagement, and ethical considerations remains essential.