抑郁症严重程度评估访谈中的二元行为分析。

Stefan Scherer, Zakia Hammal, Ying Yang, Louis-Philippe Morency, Jeffrey F Cohn
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引用次数: 34

摘要

先前的文献表明,抑郁症影响了参与者和临床采访者的发声时间,但与声学特征相混合。为了进一步调查,研究了57名患有重度抑郁症的中年成年人(男性和女性)及其临床访谈者(均为女性)。在21周的时间里,研究人员使用汉密尔顿抑郁量表(HRSD)对参与者进行了多达四次的抑郁严重程度访谈,这是临床试验中衡量抑郁严重程度的标准。使用COVAREP工具箱提取参与者和采访者的声学特征。由于错过预约、技术问题或声音样本不足而导致数据丢失。来自36名参与者及其采访者的数据符合标准,并被纳入分析,以比较高低抑郁严重程度。正如预期的那样,参与者的声学特征在男性和女性之间有所不同,并且没有随参与者的抑郁严重程度而变化。对于访谈者来说,声学特征随着访谈者抑郁的严重程度而强烈变化。采访者和被采访者之间的适应——互动者相互调整沟通行为的倾向——与抑郁严重程度呈负相关。这些研究结果表明,访谈者会根据抑郁严重程度改变他们的声学特征,而抑郁严重程度会强烈影响人际适应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Dyadic Behavior Analysis in Depression Severity Assessment Interviews.

Dyadic Behavior Analysis in Depression Severity Assessment Interviews.

Dyadic Behavior Analysis in Depression Severity Assessment Interviews.

Previous literature suggests that depression impacts vocal timing of both participants and clinical interviewers but is mixed with respect to acoustic features. To investigate further, 57 middle-aged adults (men and women) with Major Depression Disorder and their clinical interviewers (all women) were studied. Participants were interviewed for depression severity on up to four occasions over a 21 week period using the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD), which is a criterion measure for depression severity in clinical trials. Acoustic features were extracted for both participants and interviewers using COVAREP Toolbox. Missing data occurred due to missed appointments, technical problems, or insufficient vocal samples. Data from 36 participants and their interviewers met criteria and were included for analysis to compare between high and low depression severity. Acoustic features for participants varied between men and women as expected, and failed to vary with depression severity for participants. For interviewers, acoustic characteristics strongly varied with severity of the interviewee's depression. Accommodation - the tendency of interactants to adapt their communicative behavior to each other - between interviewers and interviewees was inversely related to depression severity. These findings suggest that interviewers modify their acoustic features in response to depression severity, and depression severity strongly impacts interpersonal accommodation.

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