Albrecht Terrance L, Ruckdeschel John C, Ray Fountain L, Pethe Ben J, Riddle Dawn L, Strohm Joan, Penner Louis A, Coovert Michael D, Quinn Gwendolyn, Blanchard Christina G
Communication and Behavioral Oncology Program, Barbara A. Karmanos Cancer Institute, Detroit, MI, 48201, USA.
Behav Res Methods. 2005 Feb;37(1):165-9. doi: 10.3758/bf03206411.
Recording and analyzing real-time interactions in clinical settings is important for basic and applied research in psychology and other disciplines. Investigators frequently have used simple audiotaping procedures to record these encounters (e.g., Roter, Geller, Bernhardt, Larson, & Doksum, 1999), but videorecording is increasingly viewed as more reliable and valid, because it captures the full range of complex and interdependent verbal and nonverbal behaviors that occur in an interaction. This article describes a system designed to videotape clinical interactions in a manner that can be moved in and out of different clinical rooms to preserve flexibility in its use. Data are presented to demonstrate that the system is unobtrusive during the interaction, yet fully compatible with institutional review board guidelines to protect human participants' privacy and freedom to control the recording process.