Romero Veronica, Amaral Joseph, Fitzpatrick Paula, Schmidt R C, Duncan Amie W, Richardson Michael J
Center for Cognition, Action and Perception, Department of Psychology, University of Cincinnati, Edwards C1, 4146, Cincinnati, OH, 45221, USA.
Department of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
Behav Res Methods. 2017 Apr;49(2):588-601. doi: 10.3758/s13428-016-0733-1.
Functionally stable and robust interpersonal motor coordination has been found to play an integral role in the effectiveness of social interactions. However, the motion-tracking equipment required to record and objectively measure the dynamic limb and body movements during social interaction has been very costly, cumbersome, and impractical within a non-clinical or non-laboratory setting. Here we examined whether three low-cost motion-tracking options (Microsoft Kinect skeletal tracking of either one limb or whole body and a video-based pixel change method) can be employed to investigate social motor coordination. Of particular interest was the degree to which these low-cost methods of motion tracking could be used to capture and index the coordination dynamics that occurred between a child and an experimenter for three simple social motor coordination tasks in comparison to a more expensive, laboratory-grade motion-tracking system (i.e., a Polhemus Latus system). Overall, the results demonstrated that these low-cost systems cannot substitute the Polhemus system in some tasks. However, the lower-cost Microsoft Kinect skeletal tracking and video pixel change methods were successfully able to index differences in social motor coordination in tasks that involved larger-scale, naturalistic whole body movements, which can be cumbersome and expensive to record with a Polhemus. However, we found the Kinect to be particularly vulnerable to occlusion and the pixel change method to movements that cross the video frame midline. Therefore, particular care needs to be taken in choosing the motion-tracking system that is best suited for the particular research.
功能稳定且强健的人际运动协调已被发现对社交互动的有效性起着不可或缺的作用。然而,在社交互动过程中用于记录和客观测量肢体与身体动态运动的运动追踪设备成本高昂、操作繁琐,在非临床或非实验室环境中并不实用。在此,我们研究了三种低成本的运动追踪方法(对单肢或全身进行微软Kinect骨骼追踪以及基于视频的像素变化方法)是否可用于研究社交运动协调。特别值得关注的是,相较于更昂贵的实验室级运动追踪系统(即Polhemus Latus系统),这些低成本的运动追踪方法在多大程度上能够用于捕捉和索引儿童与实验者之间在三项简单社交运动协调任务中发生的协调动态。总体而言,结果表明这些低成本系统在某些任务中无法替代Polhemus系统。然而,成本较低的微软Kinect骨骼追踪和视频像素变化方法成功地能够索引在涉及大规模、自然的全身运动的任务中社交运动协调的差异,而用Polhemus记录这些运动既繁琐又昂贵。然而,我们发现Kinect特别容易受到遮挡影响,而像素变化方法则容易受到穿过视频帧中线的运动的影响。因此,在选择最适合特定研究的运动追踪系统时需要格外谨慎。