Sunday, May 24, 2026

Handwriting speed may be a sign of cognitive decline in older (institutionalized) people. Really!

When I write, I write 99% all the time on a computer or device keyboard! Thus, I have more and more difficulty to write with my hand over the years.

Longitudinal monitoring or after a stroke of handwriting may seem to make sense for some individuals.

"... The study included 58 older adults, aged between 62 and 92, living in care homes. ..."

From the highlights and abstract:
"Highlights
  • Diagnostic differentiation emerged only in tasks with higher cognitive–motor demands.
  • Temporal efficiency and stroke organization were the most robust predictors of cognitive impairment.
  • Process–product coupling was minimal in healthy aging but pronounced in cognitive impairment.
  • Dictation tasks showed greater sensitivity than isolated pen-control tasks.
  • Digital handwriting analysis offers a scalable, non-invasive approach for early cognitive screening and longitudinal monitoring.

Background: 
Handwriting is a hierarchical cognitive–motor activity requiring the integration of motor execution, visuospatial processing, working memory, and executive control.
Digital handwriting technology enables simultaneous assessment of process (kinematics) and product (performance outcomes), offering a theoretically grounded approach to detecting cognitive vulnerability in aging.

Methods:
This study examined whether kinematic handwriting features differentiate institutionalized older adults with and without cognitive impairment and whether these features predict handwriting product performance under varying cognitive–motor demands.
Fifty-eight participants (20 cognitively healthy; 38 cognitively impaired), classified using education-adjusted MMSE cutoffs, completed pen-control tasks (DOTS, LINES) and four handwriting-speed tasks (two copy, two dictation) on a digitizing tablet. Nine standardized kinematic variables were analyzed using logistic and multiple linear regression models with correction for multiple comparisons.

Results: 
Pen-control tasks (DOTS, LINES) did not significantly discriminate between the two groups, the handwriting-speed tasks, particularly dictation, revealed significant group differences
Temporal efficiency and stroke organization variables (e.g., Duration, Number of Strokes) significantly contributed to classification in high-demand tasks. Among cognitively healthy participants, associations between kinematic and product measures were limited, suggesting preserved compensatory mechanisms.
Conversely, cognitively impaired individuals exhibited stronger process–product coupling, with Start Time, Vertical Size, and Duration significantly predicting handwriting performance in dictation tasks.

Conclusion:
Handwriting kinematics, especially temporal and stroke-related features, are sensitive indicators of cognitive impairment when assessed under high cognitive–motor load. These findings support the use of digitally mediated handwriting tasks—particularly dictation paradigms—as ecologically valid, low-cost tools for screening and monitoring cognitive decline in older adults. ..."

Handwriting speed may be a sign of cognitive decline in older people

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