Embracing Contact: Detecting Parent-Infant Interactions

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Abstract

We focus on a largely overlooked but crucial modality for parent-child interaction analysis: physical contact. In this paper, we provide a feasibility study to automatically detect contact between a parent and child from videos. Our multimodal CNN model uses a combination of 2D pose heatmaps, body part heatmaps, and cropped images. Two datasets (FlickrCI3D and YOUth PCI) are used to explore the generalization capabilities across different contact scenarios. Our experiments demonstrate that using 2D pose heatmaps and body part heatmaps yields the best performance in contact classification when trained from scratch on parent-infant interactions. We further investigate the influence of proximity on our classification performance. Our results indicate that there are unique challenges in parent-infant contact classification. Finally, we show that contact rates from aggregating frame-level predictions provide decent approximations of the true contact rates, suggesting that they can serve as an automated proxy for measuring the quality of parent-child interactions. By releasing the annotations for the YOUth PCI dataset and our code1, we encourage further research to deepen our understanding of parent-infant interactions and their implications for attachment and development.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationICMI '23
Subtitle of host publicationProceedings of the 25th International Conference on Multimodal Interaction
EditorsElisabeth André, Mohamed Chetouani
PublisherAssociation for Computing Machinery
Pages198-206
Number of pages9
ISBN (Electronic)979-8-4007-0055-2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 9 Oct 2023

Publication series

NameACM International Conference Proceeding Series

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 ACM.

Keywords

  • contact detection
  • convolutional neural network
  • interaction analysis
  • parent-child interaction
  • pose estimation

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