Kate Cagney - Chicago

Activity Space, Social Interaction and Health in Later Life

    Date:  10/17/2019 (Thu)

    Time:  3:30pm- 5:00pm

    Location:  Seminar will be held on-site: Gross Hall 270

    Organizer:  Laura Satterfield


Meeting Schedule: Login or email the organizer to schedule a meeting.

    All meetings will be held in the same location as the seminar unless otherwise noted.

    8:30am - Breakfast- Giovanna Merli

   10:00am - Don Taylor

   10:30am - Lisa Gennetian

   11:00am - Molly Copeland and Jessie West

   11:30am - Romina Tome

   12:00pm - Lunch with Marwa AlFakhri, Sarah Petry, and Christina Kamis

    1:30pm - Marcos Rangel

    2:00pm - Allison Stolte

    2:30pm - Angie O'Rand

    3:00pm - Seminar Prep

    3:30pm - Seminar Presentation (3:30pm to 5:00pm)

    6:00pm - Dinner: Scott Lynch, Angie O'Rand,


    Additional Comments:  Abstract: Whether older adults reside in their long-term communities or move to other locations, the characteristics of the places where they experience the aging process likely have profound consequences for their abilities to adapt to changes such as bereavement, retirement, and ill health, as well as to maintain independence. The Chicago Health and Activity Space in Real Time (CHART) study will provide one example of the use of new technology to address fundamental questions in social capital accumulation, urban sociology and in life course studies of older adult health. CHART employs innovative smartphone-based methods for the identification of older adults’ activity spaces (i.e., locations of routine activities in daily life). Analyses from 450 adults from ten Chicago neighborhoods who carried smartphones for GPS tracking and ecological momentary assessments (i.e., short phone-based surveys) over seven days will be used to assess, for instance, how the span, characteristics, and experiences of activity spaces vary across socioeconomic status and racial/ethnic groups. These data are then linked to Chicago-based sensor data, Array of Things, that characterize factors such as air quality. A central goal of this research program is to describe the social and spatial environments in which older adults spend their time (e.g., households, neighborhoods, networks) and how activity space influences social connectedness and health, and may be an unexplored source of inequalities in health.