Comparing Live and VideoObservation to Assess Early Parent-child Interactions in the Home

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Comparing Live and VideoObservation to Assess Early Parent-child Interactions in the Home. / Gridley, Nicole; Bywater, Tracey-Jane; Hutchings, Judith.
In: Journal of Child and Family Studies, Vol. 27, No. 6, 06.2018, p. 1818-1829.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Gridley, N, Bywater, T-J & Hutchings, J 2018, 'Comparing Live and VideoObservation to Assess Early Parent-child Interactions in the Home', Journal of Child and Family Studies, vol. 27, no. 6, pp. 1818-1829. https://doi.org/10.1007%2Fs10826-018-1039-y

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Gridley N, Bywater TJ, Hutchings J. Comparing Live and VideoObservation to Assess Early Parent-child Interactions in the Home. Journal of Child and Family Studies. 2018 Jun;27(6):1818-1829. Epub 2018 Feb 19. doi: 10.1007%2Fs10826-018-1039-y

Author

Gridley, Nicole ; Bywater, Tracey-Jane ; Hutchings, Judith. / Comparing Live and VideoObservation to Assess Early Parent-child Interactions in the Home. In: Journal of Child and Family Studies. 2018 ; Vol. 27, No. 6. pp. 1818-1829.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Comparing Live and VideoObservation to Assess Early Parent-child Interactions in the Home

AU - Gridley, Nicole

AU - Bywater, Tracey-Jane

AU - Hutchings, Judith

N1 - This study was conducted as part of a self-funded Masters and a fully funded PhD (2/3 School of Psychology, Bangor University; 1/3 Children’s Early Intervention Trust Charity)

PY - 2018/6

Y1 - 2018/6

N2 - Observation is the ‘gold standard’ for assessing parent-child behavior, however few studies have compared coding live, in real time, versus coding from videotapes in terms of their achievable levels of coder reliability within the field of parent programme research. This is important for practitioners and researchers for whom decisions might be influenced by time and financial constraints, but where outcomes may have real practical and clinical implications. Trained coders in the Dyadic Parent-Child Interaction Coding System Revised, coded 40 half-hour videotapes of 33 parent-toddler dyads interacting in the home on 29 items of dyadic behaviour. Four theorised composite variables were constructed. Videotaped data were compared to data drawn from the same interactions previously coded ‘live’ in the home. Correlations indicated significant agreement between the two modes at the item by item level (p < .001). Wilcoxon Rank tests revealed significant differences (p < .001) between the two modes. Eight items exceeded a ±30% change in median score suggesting clinically relevant differences. Although both methods achieved acceptable levels of inter-rater reliability, video coding achieved higher levels of agreement. Subtle differences exist between the two modes. Whilst neither mode proved superior it is suggested that they should not be used interchangeably.

AB - Observation is the ‘gold standard’ for assessing parent-child behavior, however few studies have compared coding live, in real time, versus coding from videotapes in terms of their achievable levels of coder reliability within the field of parent programme research. This is important for practitioners and researchers for whom decisions might be influenced by time and financial constraints, but where outcomes may have real practical and clinical implications. Trained coders in the Dyadic Parent-Child Interaction Coding System Revised, coded 40 half-hour videotapes of 33 parent-toddler dyads interacting in the home on 29 items of dyadic behaviour. Four theorised composite variables were constructed. Videotaped data were compared to data drawn from the same interactions previously coded ‘live’ in the home. Correlations indicated significant agreement between the two modes at the item by item level (p < .001). Wilcoxon Rank tests revealed significant differences (p < .001) between the two modes. Eight items exceeded a ±30% change in median score suggesting clinically relevant differences. Although both methods achieved acceptable levels of inter-rater reliability, video coding achieved higher levels of agreement. Subtle differences exist between the two modes. Whilst neither mode proved superior it is suggested that they should not be used interchangeably.

KW - Observation

KW - Reliability

KW - Agreement

KW - Parent-child interaction

U2 - 10.1007%2Fs10826-018-1039-y

DO - 10.1007%2Fs10826-018-1039-y

M3 - Article

VL - 27

SP - 1818

EP - 1829

JO - Journal of Child and Family Studies

JF - Journal of Child and Family Studies

SN - 1062-1024

IS - 6

ER -