1. Comparing Automatic and Manual Measures of Parent–Infant Conversational Turns: A Word of Caution
- Author
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Patricia K. Kuhl, Naja Ferjan Ramirez, and Daniel S. Hippe
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Parents ,Future studies ,Environment analysis ,education ,computer.software_genre ,Language Development ,050105 experimental psychology ,Education ,Child Development ,Empirical Reports ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Parent-Child Relations ,Interpersonal interaction ,business.industry ,Communication ,05 social sciences ,Limits of agreement ,Infant ,Empirical Report ,Child, Preschool ,Infant Behavior ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Artificial intelligence ,Psychology ,business ,computer ,Child Language ,Word (computer architecture) ,Natural language processing ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Coding (social sciences) - Abstract
The Language ENvironment Analysis system (LENA) records children’s language environment and provides an automatic estimate of adult–child conversational turn count (CTC). The present study compares LENA’s CTC estimate to manually coded CTC on a sample of 70 English‐speaking infants recorded longitudinally at 6, 10, 14, 18, and 24 months of age. At each age, LENA’s CTC was significantly higher than manually coded CTC (all ps
- Published
- 2021