| Literature DB >> 27219342 |
C Leclère1,2,3, M Avril1, S Viaux-Savelon1,2, N Bodeau2, C Achard1, S Missonnier3, M Keren4, R Feldman5, M Chetouani1, D Cohen1,2.
Abstract
Studying early interaction is essential for understanding development and psychopathology. Automatic computational methods offer the possibility to analyse social signals and behaviours of several partners simultaneously and dynamically. Here, 20 dyads of mothers and their 13-36-month-old infants were videotaped during mother-infant interaction including 10 extremely high-risk and 10 low-risk dyads using two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) sensors. From 2D+3D data and 3D space reconstruction, we extracted individual parameters (quantity of movement and motion activity ratio for each partner) and dyadic parameters related to the dynamics of partners heads distance (contribution to heads distance), to the focus of mutual engagement (percentage of time spent face to face or oriented to the task) and to the dynamics of motion activity (synchrony ratio, overlap ratio, pause ratio). Features are compared with blind global rating of the interaction using the coding interactive behavior (CIB). We found that individual and dyadic parameters of 2D+3D motion features perfectly correlates with rated CIB maternal and dyadic composite scores. Support Vector Machine classification using all 2D-3D motion features classified 100% of the dyads in their group meaning that motion behaviours are sufficient to distinguish high-risk from low-risk dyads. The proposed method may present a promising, low-cost methodology that can uniquely use artificial technology to detect meaningful features of human interactions and may have several implications for studying dyadic behaviours in psychiatry. Combining both global rating scales and computerized methods may enable a continuum of time scale from a summary of entire interactions to second-by-second dynamics.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27219342 PMCID: PMC5070050 DOI: 10.1038/tp.2016.82
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Psychiatry ISSN: 2158-3188 Impact factor: 6.222
Demographics and clinical characteristics of the participants
| P | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mother age: mean (±s.d.) years | 32.7 (±3.9) | 34.8 (±5.1) | W=62 | 0.18 |
| Infant age: mean (±s.d.) months | 26.2 (±9.4) | 23.2 (±7.7) | W=36.5 | 0.51 |
| Infant sex: % of male ( | 60% (6 males, 4 females) | 40% (4 males, 6 females) | Fisher | 0.82 |
| DC 0–3 PIRGAS score: mean (±s.d.) | 38.7 (±14.6) | 78.6 (±10.2) | W=87 | <0.001 |
Abbreviation: DC 0–3 PIRGAS, Parent–Infant Relationship Global Assessment Scale from the diagnostic classification 0 to 3.
Wilcoxon test unless specified.
Odds ratio=1.81; 95% confidence interval (0.22–16.64).
Figure 1Experimental setup for capture and extraction of two-dimensional plus three-dimensional (2D+3D) motion feature during mother–infant early interaction. Two Kinect cameras (one for the mother and one for the infant) record the interaction. To permit 3D reconstruction, the video data are synchronized for time through hand clapping and spatial 3D calibration is possible through a chessboard used at the beginning of the recording. The 2D images, 3D images and skeleton are recorded during infant–mother interaction. After the 3D reconstruction, several 2D+3D motion features are extracted at both individual (quantity of movements, motion activity) and synchrony levels (contribution to heads distance change; time spent face to face; time spent gazing at the game; overlap ratio; pause ratio; synchrony ratios).
2D and 3D motion features to study early mother interaction: definition and technical requirements
Figure 2Radar diagram of the coding interactive behavior (CIB) during mother–infant early interaction according to groups: control dyads vs dyads with neglect mothers. With the CIB, better interaction is associated with higher scores in mother reciprocity and mother limit setting, infant compliance and infant social involvement, and dyadic reciprocity; as well as lower score in mother intrusiveness, infant withdrawal and dyadic negative status. Comparison between groups were done using Wilcoxon nonparametric test.