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Looking represents choosing in toddlers: Exploring the equivalence between multimodal measures in forced-choice tasks
Authors:Hiromichi Hagihara  Naoto Ienaga  Kei Terayama  Yusuke Moriguchi  Masa-aki Sakagami
Affiliation:1. Graduate School of Human and Environmental Studies, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan;2. Graduate School of Science and Technology, Keio University, Yokohama, Japan;3. Graduate School of Medical Life Science, Yokohama City University, Yokohama, Japan;4. Graduate School of Letters, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan
Abstract:In the two-alternative forced-choice (2AFC) paradigm, manual responses such as pointing have been widely used as measures to estimate cognitive abilities. While pointing measurements can be easily collected, coded, analyzed, and interpreted, absent responses are often observed particularly when adopting these measures for toddler studies, which leads to an increase of missing data. Although looking responses such as preferential looking can be available as alternative measures in such cases, it is unknown how well looking measurements can be interpreted as equivalent to manual ones. This study aimed to answer this question by investigating how accurately pointing responses (i.e., left or right) could be predicted from concurrent preferential looking. Using pre-existing videos of toddlers aged 18–23 months engaged in an intermodal word comprehension task, we developed models predicting manual from looking responses. Results showed substantial prediction accuracy for both the Simple Majority Vote and Machine Learning-Based classifiers, which indicates that looking responses would be reasonable alternative measures of manual ones. However, the further exploratory analysis revealed that when applying the created models for data of toddlers who did not produce clear pointing responses, the estimation agreement of missing pointing between the models and the human coders slightly dropped. This indicates that looking responses without pointing were qualitatively different from those with pointing. Bridging two measurements in forced-choice tasks would help researchers avoid wasting collected data due to the absence of manual responses and interpret results from different modalities comprehensively.
Keywords:language development  machine learning  pointing  preferential looking  two-alternative forced-choice task
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