Automated analysis of clinical interviews indicates altered head movements during social interactions in youth at clinical high-risk for psychosis.

IF 3 Q2 PSYCHIATRY
Juliette Lozano-Goupil, Tina Gupta, Trevor F Williams, Amy E Pinkham, Claudia M Haase, Stewart A Shankman, Vijay A Mittal
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Abstract

Alterations in social functioning are commonly observed in youth at clinical high risk (CHR) for psychosis. Previous research has focused on perception and interpretation of social stimuli. Assessments of social behavior have been limited and have typically been conducted using time-consuming, manual, and not always reliable methods. The current study aimed to characterize patterns of head movements, a critical feature of nonverbal social behavior, to determine alterations among CHR individuals, using novel automated tools. A total of 87 CHR and 90 healthy control youth completed video-recorded clinical interviews. Segments when participants were responding to questions were processed using an open-access machine learning-based head tracking program. This program extracted target variables such as total head movement, amplitude, and speed in each direction (x, y, and z). Relationships between head movement patterns and symptoms were then examined. Findings indicated that the CHR group exhibited the same amount of head movements as the control group, establishing that results did not reflect a more global deficit. Notably, the CHR group executed spontaneous head turns in side-to-side movements (such as the "no" gesture) at a significantly slower speed when compared to controls (U = 2860, p = 0019, d = -0.41). Slower side-to-side head movement was also associated with elevated clinician-rated scores of "disorganized communication" (r = -0.23), but not with other symptoms in the positive domain nor negative or depressive phenomenology. These findings provide new insights into alterations in social processes in individuals at CHR and highlight the promise of using automated tools to capture spontaneous head movements, thereby expanding the assessment of social behavior, communication, and applied social cognition.

临床访谈的自动分析表明,精神病临床高危青年在社会交往中头部运动改变。
社会功能的改变通常在精神病临床高风险(CHR)的青年中观察到。以往的研究主要集中在对社会刺激的感知和解释上。对社会行为的评估是有限的,而且通常是使用耗时的、人工的、并不总是可靠的方法来进行的。目前的研究旨在描述头部运动的模式,这是非语言社会行为的一个重要特征,以确定CHR个体之间的变化,使用新的自动化工具。共有87名CHR青年和90名健康对照青年完成了录像临床访谈。参与者回答问题时的片段使用开放获取的基于机器学习的头部跟踪程序进行处理。这个程序提取的目标变量,如总头部运动,幅度和速度在每个方向(x, y和z)。然后检查头部运动模式与症状之间的关系。研究结果表明,CHR组表现出与对照组相同的头部运动量,这表明结果并未反映出更多的全局缺陷。值得注意的是,与对照组相比,CHR组在左右运动(如“不”手势)中以明显较慢的速度进行自发的头部转动(U = 2860, p = 0019, d = -0.41)。较慢的左右头部运动也与临床评定的“沟通紊乱”得分升高有关(r = -0.23),但与其他积极领域的症状、消极或抑郁现象无关。这些发现为研究CHR个体社会过程的变化提供了新的见解,并强调了使用自动化工具捕捉自发头部运动的前景,从而扩大了对社会行为、交流和应用社会认知的评估。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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