Visuals versus textual scales: Optimizing reliability and user experience in observational assessment of parent-child interaction

Objective: Assessment of parent-child interaction by practitioners is of great importance but hindered by a lack of instruments that withstand the constraints daily practice places on usage. Visuals may offer an alternative format. Visualizations were tested on reliability, accuracy, and feasibility...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mirte L. Forrer, Carlo Schuengel, Mirjam Oosterman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-06-01
Series:PEC Innovation
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2772628225000056
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Summary:Objective: Assessment of parent-child interaction by practitioners is of great importance but hindered by a lack of instruments that withstand the constraints daily practice places on usage. Visuals may offer an alternative format. Visualizations were tested on reliability, accuracy, and feasibility in observational assessment of parent-child interaction, as alternatives for textual rating scales. Methods: In Study 1, 95 students rated parent-child interactions with a video or text anchor scale, and in Study 2, 217 professionals rated the same interactions with a decision tree including visual components or a text anchor scale. Results: Students using the video anchor scale were less reliable and accurate, slower, and had a less positive user experience than students using the text anchor scale. Professionals using the decision tree did not differ in reliability and were comparable in user experience with professionals using the text anchor scale. Rater accuracy showed similar dependency on quality of parental behavior for both scales: ratings were less accurate when the quality of the parent-child interaction was low, and more accurate when the quality was high. However, professionals were less accurate and slower in using the decision tree than the text anchor scale. Conclusion: With a first iteration of a decision tree performing the same to or only slightly worse, efforts to further develop decision trees might be worthwhile. Innovation: These nonintuitive findings underscore the value of experimental testing in assessment design in daily practice.
ISSN:2772-6282