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Computerized home video detection for motherese may help to study impaired interaction between infants who become autistic and their parents

✍ Scribed by Ammar Mahdhaoui; Mohamed Chetouani; Raquel S. Cassel; Catherine Saint-Georges; Erika Parlato; Marie Christine Laznik; Fabio Apicella; Filippo Muratori; Sandra Maestro; David Cohen


Book ID
102523249
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
366 KB
Volume
20
Category
Article
ISSN
1049-8931

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Autism is a well‐defined clinical syndrome after the second year of life, but information on autism in the first two years of life is still lacking. The study of home videos has described children with autism during the first year of life as not displaying the rigid pattern typical of later symptoms. Therefore, developmental/environmental factors are claimed in addition to genetic/biological ones to explain the onset of autism during maturation. Here we describe (1) a developmental hypothesis focusing on the possible implication of motherese impoverishment during the course of parent–infant interactions as a possible co‐factor; (2) the methodological approach we used to develop a computerized algorithm to detect motherese in home videos; (3) the best configuration performance of the detector in extracting motherese from home video sequences (accuracy = 82% on speaker‐independent versus 87.5% on speaker‐dependent) that we should use to test this hypothesis. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.