Comparison of video- and EMG-based evaluations of the magnitude of children's emotion-modulated startle response

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Abstract

We investigated the reliability and validity of a video-based method of measuring the magnitude of children's emotion-modulated startle response when electromyographic (EMG) measurement is not feasible. Thirty-one children between the ages of 4 and 7 years were videotaped while watching short video clips designed to elicit happiness or fear. Embedded in the audio track of the video clips were acoustic startle probes. A coding system was developed to quantify from the video record the strength of the eye-blink startle response to the probes. EMG measurement of the eye blink was obtained simultaneously. Intercoder reliability for the video coding was high (Cohen's κ = .90). The average within-subjects probe-by-probe correlation between the EMG- and video-based methods was .84. Group-level correlations between the methods were also strong, and there was some evidence of emotion modulation of the startle response with both the EMG- and the video-derived data. Although the video method cannot be used to assess the latency, probability, or duration of startle blinks, the findings indicate that it can serve as a valid proxy of EMG in the assessment of the magnitude of emotion-modulated startle in studies of children conducted outside of a laboratory setting, where traditional psychophysiological methods are not feasible.

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Essex, M. J., Goldsmith, H. H., Smider, N. A., Dolski, I., Sutton, S. K., & Davidson, R. J. (2003). Comparison of video- and EMG-based evaluations of the magnitude of children’s emotion-modulated startle response. Behavior Research Methods, Instruments, and Computers, 35(4), 590–598. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03195538

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