Editorial: “What say you?” The promise and potential pitfalls of using automated and passive monitoring approaches to assess parenting behaviours from verbal and written communication

Author:

Fisher Helen L.12ORCID,Firth Zoë3,Aicardi Christine456,Downs Johnny3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Social, Genetic & Developmental Psychiatry Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience King's College London London UK

2. ESRC Centre for Society and Mental Health King's College London London UK

3. CAMHS Digital Lab, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King's College London London UK

4. Department of Informatics King's College London London UK

5. Department of Global Health & Social Medicine King's College London London UK

6. School of Biomedical Engineering & Imaging Sciences King's College London London UK

Abstract

Rates of mental health problems in adolescence are rising as highlighted in this current issue of the Journal. It is therefore increasingly important to identify children who may be at risk so that preventive interventions can be deployed before they reach adolescence. Adverse parenting has long been considered a risk factor for poor mental health in adolescence, but the methods traditionally used to assess this are laborious, burdensome and costly. Recently, passive monitoring and automated approaches to collecting and analysing spoken and written forms of parental communication have been proposed. This editorial examines the promise of such technological advances for assessing parenting and provides words of caution from parents and young people that should be heeded before rolling these approaches out at scale.

Funder

Medical Research Council

Economic and Social Research Council

National Institute for Health and Care Research

Publisher

Wiley

Reference10 articles.

1. Trends in adolescent emotional problems in Wales between 2013 and 2019: the contribution of peer relationships

2. Expressed emotion in the family: A meta‐analytic review of expressed emotion as a mechanism of the transgenerational transmission of mental disorders;Fahrer J.;Frontiers in Psychiatry,2022

3. Detecting adolescent depression through passive monitoring of linguistic markers in smartphone communication

4. Long‐term associations between early attachment and parenting and adolescent susceptibility to post‐traumatic distress in a South African high‐risk sample;Haag K.;Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry,2024

5. Editorial Perspective: The paradox of precision health in early development – Building large samples to yield individual‐level measures;Johnson M.H.;Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry,2024

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