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Chloë Leclère

Researcher at Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University

Publications -  6
Citations -  380

Chloë Leclère is an academic researcher from Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Internal medicine & Prospective cohort study. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications receiving 286 citations.

Papers
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Why synchrony matters during mother-child interactions: a systematic review.

TL;DR: This paper proposes an integrative approach combining clinical observation and engineering techniques to improve the quality of synchrony analysis and proposes defining synchrony as a dynamic and reciprocal adaptation of the temporal structure of behaviors and shared affect between interactive partners.
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Interaction and behaviour imaging: a novel method to measure mother-infant interaction using video 3D reconstruction.

TL;DR: The proposed method may present a promising, low-cost methodology that can uniquely use artificial technology to detect meaningful features of human interactions and may have several implications for studying dyadic behaviours in psychiatry.
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Social signal processing for studying parent-infant interaction.

TL;DR: This paper proposes an explorative method to acquire and extract relevant social signals from a naturalistic early parent–infant interaction using the IMI2S (Interaction, Multimodal Integration, and Social Signal) Framework.
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Validation de la version française du Coding Interactive Behavior sur une population d’enfants à la naissance et à 2 mois

TL;DR: In this paper, les proprietes psychometriques de la validation francaise du Coding Interactive Behavior (CIB) developpe par Ruth Feldman, echelle permettant l’evaluation de la dyade mere-enfant.
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Impact of COVID-19 lockdown on maternal psychological status, the couple’s relationship and mother-child interaction: a prospective study

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors compared the rate of postpartum depression during the first COVID-19 lockdown with the rate observed prior to the pandemic, and examined factors associated with PPD.