Choji Yuki, Hirokawa Nanami, Morimoto Chie, China Norihito, Nakai Akio, Miyata Kazunori
Occupational Therapy Course, Department of Rehabilitation, Faculty of Allied Health Science, Niigata University of Rehabilitation, Murakami, Japan.
Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Nomi, Japan.
PLoS One. 2025 Jan 9;20(1):e0314113. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0314113. eCollection 2025.
The acquisition of chopstick skills is considered essential for child development and etiquette in many Asian cultures. However, a decline in chopstick education has been observed in Japan, and the underlying causes of this phenomenon remain elusive. This study aims to investigate children's chopstick skills and develop an objective method to evaluate them using a hand posture estimation model. In this study. A questionnaire survey was conducted among 165 first-grade elementary school students (aged 6-7) and their parents to investigate factors influencing chopstick proficiency. To complement this, video analyses were performed using a hand posture estimation model to assess the accuracy of chopstick grip classification. The findings showed that children's chopstick-holding styles could be classified into four categories: four-finger prehension (64 participants), three-finger prehension (49 participants), palm prehension (20 participants), and others (32 participants). Despite the fact that over 80% of parents reported teaching their children how to use chopsticks, a mere 9.7% of children exhibited correct chopstick-holding technique. Interestingly, factors such as intergenerational cohabitation with grandparents and child's age significantly influenced chopstick proficiency. These results indicate that a gap exists in the intergenerational transmission of chopstick skills, with parents potentially lacking sufficient knowledge to teach their children. The hand posture estimation model had a high accuracy rate of 85%, precision of 83%, and recall of 88% to identify whether children use chopsticks traditionally. While chopstick education is predominantly conducted within Japanese households, the increasing prevalence of nuclear families and dual-income households suggests a decline in intergenerational transmission of chopstick education. To address this issue, it is imperative to develop web applications that can integrate chopstick education into school curricula and promote chopstick skills among students.
在许多亚洲文化中,掌握使用筷子的技能被认为对儿童发展和礼仪至关重要。然而,在日本,人们观察到筷子教育有所下降,而这一现象的根本原因仍不明朗。本研究旨在调查儿童使用筷子的技能,并开发一种使用手部姿势估计模型来客观评估这些技能的方法。在本研究中,对165名小学一年级学生(6至7岁)及其家长进行了问卷调查,以调查影响筷子使用熟练度的因素。作为补充,使用手部姿势估计模型进行视频分析,以评估筷子握持分类的准确性。研究结果表明,儿童持筷方式可分为四类:四指抓握(64名参与者)、三指抓握(49名参与者)、手掌抓握(20名参与者)和其他(32名参与者)。尽管超过80%的家长表示教过孩子如何使用筷子,但只有9.7%的儿童表现出正确的持筷技巧。有趣的是,与祖父母代际同居和孩子年龄等因素对筷子使用熟练度有显著影响。这些结果表明,筷子技能的代际传承存在差距,家长可能缺乏足够的知识来教导孩子。手部姿势估计模型在识别儿童是否传统使用筷子方面具有较高的准确率(85%)、精确率(83%)和召回率(88%)。虽然筷子教育主要在日本家庭内部进行,但核心家庭和双收入家庭的日益普遍表明筷子教育的代际传承在下降。为了解决这个问题,开发能够将筷子教育纳入学校课程并在学生中推广筷子技能的网络应用程序势在必行。