Spatial Navigation as a Digital Marker for Clinically Differentiating Cognitive Impairment Severity

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Abstract

Navigation impairments emerge early in Alzheimer’s disease, but assessments targeting these deficits remain underutilised or impractical for cognitive screening. The Spatial Performance Assessment for Cognitive Evaluation (SPACE) is a digital tool that evaluates spatial navigation deficits associated with cognitive impairment. In a memory clinic and community cohort (n = 300), SPACE accurately discriminated across Clinical Dementia Rating levels with higher accuracy than models including demographic variables. Including SPACE significantly increased the AUC for distinguishing normal cognition from mild impairment (0.76 to 0.94), normal cognition from moderate impairment (0.79 to 0.95), and very-mild from mild (0.70 to 0.91), all with high sensitivity and specificity. A short version of SPACE (< 11 mins) reduced administration time by 40% while maintaining high diagnostic accuracy. All models were confirmed through cross-validation. These findings highlight the potential of digital navigation assessments to advance early detection, contributing to scalable and accessible healthcare.

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