A Multi-modal System to Assess Cognition in Children from their Physical Movements

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Abstract

In recent years, computer and game-based cognitive tests have become popular with the advancement in mobile technology. However, these tests require very little body movements and do not consider the influence that physical motion has on cognitive development. Our work mainly focus on assessing cognition in children through their physical movements. Hence, an assessment test "Ball-Drop-to-the-Beat"that is both physically and cognitively demanding has been used where the child is expected to perform certain actions based on the commands. The task is specifically designed to measure attention, response inhibition, and coordination in children. A dataset has been created with 25 children performing this test. To automate the scoring, a computer vision-based assessment system has been developed. The vision system employs an attention-based fusion mechanism to combine multiple modalities such as optical flow, human poses, and objects in the scene to predict a child's action. The proposed method outperforms other state-of-the-art approaches by achieving an average accuracy of 89.8 percent on predicting the actions and an average accuracy of 88.5 percent on predicting the rhythm on the Ball-Drop-to-the-Beat dataset.

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APA

Ramesh Babu, A., Zadeh, M. Z., Jaiswal, A., Lueckenhoff, A., Kyrarini, M., & Makedon, F. (2020). A Multi-modal System to Assess Cognition in Children from their Physical Movements. In ICMI 2020 - Proceedings of the 2020 International Conference on Multimodal Interaction (pp. 6–14). Association for Computing Machinery, Inc. https://doi.org/10.1145/3382507.3418829

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