scholarly journals Combining Recurrence Analysis and Automatic Movement Extraction from Video Recordings to Study Behavioral Coupling in Face-to-Face Parent-Child Interactions

2017 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
David López Pérez ◽  
Giuseppe Leonardi ◽  
Alicja Niedźwiecka ◽  
Alicja Radkowska ◽  
Joanna Rączaszek-Leonardi ◽  
...  
BMJ Open ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. e055490
Author(s):  
Andria Parrott ◽  
Bharathi J Zvara ◽  
Sarah A Keim ◽  
Rebecca Andridge ◽  
Sarah E Anderson

PurposeObesity prevention is increasingly focused on early childhood, but toddlers have not been well-studied, and children born preterm are frequently excluded. The Play & Grow Cohort was established to investigate child growth in relation to parent-child interactions in mealtime and non-mealtime settings.ParticipantsBetween December 2017 and May 2019, 300 toddlers and primary caregivers were recruited from records of a large paediatric care provider in Columbus, Ohio, USA. This report describes recruitment of the cohort and outlines the data collection protocols for two toddler and two preschool-age visits. The first study visit coincided with enrolment and occurred when children (57% boys) were a mean (SD) calendar age of 18.2 (0.7) months.Findings to dateChildren in the cohort are diverse relative to gestational age at birth (16%, 28–31 completed weeks’ gestation; 21%, 32–36 weeks’ gestation; 63%, ≥37 weeks’ gestation) and race/ethnicity (8%, Hispanic; 35%, non-Hispanic black; 46%, non-Hispanic white). Caregivers enrolled in the cohort are primarily the child’s biological mother (93%) and are diverse in age (range 18–54 years), education (23%, high school or less; 20% graduate degree) and annual household income (27%, <US$20 000 24%, ≥US$90 000). Parent-child interactions were video-recorded during play in the laboratory at 18 months (n=299) and during play, reading and mealtime in the home (n=284) at 24 months. The preschool phase of the study was impacted by COVID-19. Parent-child interactions were video-recorded during play and mealtime at home at 36 months (n=141) and during a standardised buffet meal in the laboratory at 42 months (n=50). Caregivers unable to participate in face-to-face visits due to COVID-19 completed questionnaires.Future plansAssessment during middle childhood is being planned. Future visits will include anthropometric measurements and parent-child interactions at mealtime. School-based outcomes are additionally being considered.


2020 ◽  
pp. 146879841989604
Author(s):  
Christina Davidson ◽  
Susan Danby ◽  
Stuart Ekberg ◽  
Karen Thorpe

Many studies that examine parent–child interactions while reading digital texts focus on the reading of e-books. Rather less is known about parent–child interactions and reading aloud of other screen texts that occur during young children’s everyday use of digital technologies at home. This article presents the findings from a conversation analytic study of a collection of 36 sequences of interaction between young children and their parents where the words ‘says’ or ‘say’ were used to refer to print on the screen. The collection involved interactions between seven parent–child dyads. Sequences were identified through repeated viewing of 29 hours of video-recordings made by parents. Analysis enabled systematic identification and description of two distinctive practices in talk that led to reading aloud from the screen. Reading aloud of the text was provided by either a speaker using a preface, such as ‘it says’, or solicited using a question. Discussion establishes how young children and their parents orient to and produce reading aloud practices, how reading aloud meets the instrumental purposes of children and the ways that young children competently enable reading aloud. It is concluded that reading aloud from the screen is an important information source for young children, enabled through parent–child interactions.


Author(s):  
Gijs A. Holleman ◽  
Ignace T. C. Hooge ◽  
Jorg Huijding ◽  
Maja Deković ◽  
Chantal Kemner ◽  
...  

AbstractA primary mode of human social behavior is face-to-face interaction. In this study, we investigated the characteristics of gaze and its relation to speech behavior during video-mediated face-to-face interactions between parents and their preadolescent children. 81 parent–child dyads engaged in conversations about cooperative and conflictive family topics. We used a dual-eye tracking setup that is capable of concurrently recording eye movements, frontal video, and audio from two conversational partners. Our results show that children spoke more in the cooperation-scenario whereas parents spoke more in the conflict-scenario. Parents gazed slightly more at the eyes of their children in the conflict-scenario compared to the cooperation-scenario. Both parents and children looked more at the other's mouth region while listening compared to while speaking. Results are discussed in terms of the role that parents and children take during cooperative and conflictive interactions and how gaze behavior may support and coordinate such interactions.


2017 ◽  
Vol 53 (8) ◽  
pp. 1428-1436 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessa Reed ◽  
Kathy Hirsh-Pasek ◽  
Roberta Michnick Golinkoff

2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica L. Spigner ◽  
Stephen R. Boggs ◽  
Regina Bussing ◽  
Sheila M. Eyberg

2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erlanger A. Turner ◽  
Ashley Gibb ◽  
Susan Perkins-Parks ◽  
Reagan Rinderknecht

2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erin A. Wilkerson ◽  
Philip C. Hoffman ◽  
Iris Chin ◽  
Orhay Mirzapolos ◽  
Catherine A. Haden ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Angela K. Henneberger ◽  
Michal S. Rischall ◽  
Kate E. Keenan

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