
Research Article
Gaze Behaviour in Adolescents with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder During Exposure Within Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy
@INPROCEEDINGS{10.1007/978-3-031-59717-6_1, author={Annika Thierfelder and Bj\o{}rn Severitt and Carolin S. Klein and Annika K. Alt and Karsten Hollmann and Andreas Bulling and Winfried Ilg}, title={Gaze Behaviour in Adolescents with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder During Exposure Within Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy}, proceedings={Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare. 17th EAI International Conference, PervasiveHealth 2023, Malm\o{}, Sweden, November 27-29, 2023, Proceedings}, proceedings_a={PERVASIVEHEALTH}, year={2024}, month={6}, keywords={mobile eye tracking obsessive-compulsive disorder sensor-assisted therapy exposure exercises real life gaze behaviour}, doi={10.1007/978-3-031-59717-6_1} }
- Annika Thierfelder
Björn Severitt
Carolin S. Klein
Annika K. Alt
Karsten Hollmann
Andreas Bulling
Winfried Ilg
Year: 2024
Gaze Behaviour in Adolescents with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder During Exposure Within Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy
PERVASIVEHEALTH
Springer
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-59717-6_1
Abstract
Digital health interventions that involve monitoring patient behaviour increasingly benefit from improvements in sensor technology. Eye tracking in particular can provide useful information for psychotherapy but an effective method to extract this information is currently missing. We propose a method to analyse natural gaze behaviour during exposure exercises for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). At the core of our method is a neural network to detect fixations based on gaze patch similarities. Detected fixations are clustered intoexposure-relevant,therapist, andotherlocations and corresponding eye movement metrics are correlated with subjective stress reported during exposure. We evaluate our method on gaze and stress data recorded during video-based psychotherapy of four adolescents with OCD. We found that fixation duration ontoexposure-relevantlocations consistently increases with the perceived stress level as opposed to fixations ontootherlocations. Fixation behaviour towards thetherapistvaried largely between patients. Taken together, our results not only demonstrate the effectiveness of our method for analysing natural gaze behaviour during exposure sessions. The fixation analysis shows that patients allocate more attention towards exposure-related objects under higher stress levels, suggesting higher mental load. As such, providing feedback on fixation behaviour holds significant promise to support therapists in monitoring intensity of exposure exercises.