npj Digital Medicine (Feb 2020)

Towards the automatic detection of social biomarkers in autism spectrum disorder: introducing the simulated interaction task (SIT)

  • Hanna Drimalla,
  • Tobias Scheffer,
  • Niels Landwehr,
  • Irina Baskow,
  • Stefan Roepke,
  • Behnoush Behnia,
  • Isabel Dziobek

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41746-020-0227-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Social interaction deficits are evident in many psychiatric conditions and specifically in autism spectrum disorder (ASD), but hard to assess objectively. We present a digital tool to automatically quantify biomarkers of social interaction deficits: the simulated interaction task (SIT), which entails a standardized 7-min simulated dialog via video and the automated analysis of facial expressions, gaze behavior, and voice characteristics. In a study with 37 adults with ASD without intellectual disability and 43 healthy controls, we show the potential of the tool as a diagnostic instrument and for better description of ASD-associated social phenotypes. Using machine-learning tools, we detected individuals with ASD with an accuracy of 73%, sensitivity of 67%, and specificity of 79%, based on their facial expressions and vocal characteristics alone. Especially reduced social smiling and facial mimicry as well as a higher voice fundamental frequency and harmony-to-noise-ratio were characteristic for individuals with ASD. The time-effective and cost-effective computer-based analysis outperformed a majority vote and performed equal to clinical expert ratings.