Social Interaction
Which ICF domain does Social Interaction map to?
In the ICF, Social Interaction maps to the Activities and Participation component — specifically Chapter 7, Interpersonal interactions and relationships, code d710 (Basic interpersonal interactions). In early childhood this describes the child's actual engagement with caregivers and peers: initiating contact, reciprocal play, joint attention and responding to social cues. It is a functioning domain documented with capacity and performance qualifiers, refined in the ICF-CY for young children — not a diagnosis or body-function impairment.
In the ICF, the everyday capacity to start and sustain contact with others has a precise home — and in early childhood it sits within the Activities and Participation domain.
In short
Social Interaction maps to the ICF Activities and Participation component, specifically the chapter on Interpersonal interactions and relationships (Chapter 7), where d710 — Basic interpersonal interactions captures the foundational skills of relating to others. In early childhood this means initiating contact, responding to social cues, showing warmth and regard, and sustaining culturally appropriate engagement with caregivers and peers. It is a functioning domain — describing what a child does in real-life social contexts — rather than a diagnosis or a body-function impairment.The science: locating d710 within the ICF architecture
The International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) describes functioning across two broad components: Body Functions and Structures, and Activities and Participation. Social interaction is not a body function (such as the mental functions of d/b coding for attention or emotion); it is an activity and participation construct, because it describes a child's actual engagement in life situations.Within Activities and Participation, Chapter 7 — Interpersonal interactions and relationships groups the codes for relating to people. d710 (Basic interpersonal interactions) covers acting upon others with the appropriate contextual and social judgement — showing consideration and esteem, responding to others' feelings, and maintaining social space. It is distinguished from d720 (complex interpersonal interactions) and the particular-relationship codes (d730–d770). For young children, the ICF-CY (Children & Youth) derivation refines these qualifiers to early-developmental expressions — eye contact, joint attention, reciprocal play, and the give-and-take that precedes conversation. Clinically, the same construct is documented with qualifiers for capacity (what a child can do in a standardised setting) and performance (what they do in their everyday environment), which is why context and caregiver report matter so much in paediatric profiling.
Why the mapping matters for measurement
Anchoring social interaction to d710 lets a clinical team describe strengths and support needs in a shared, internationally comparable language, link goals to participation rather than to deficit, and track change over time across home, preschool and therapy settings.The Pinnacle way
This is general reference information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care, never from an app or form. Our teams describe a child's social communication profile in ICF-aligned terms and translate it into individualised goals, drawing on speech therapy and structured interaction supports. Explore more at our [home](/) hub.Trusted sources
WHO ICF browser entry for d710 (Basic interpersonal interactions) and the ICF Chapter 7 framework; WHO guidance on the ICF and its Children & Youth derivation. These describe social interaction as an Activities and Participation construct documented with capacity and performance qualifiers.Next step — Clinicians and researchers seeking ICF-aligned developmental profiling can partner with Pinnacle Blooms Network to map social interaction to functioning goals and outcomes.
What to watch
In early childhood, observe the participation-level expressions of d710: eye contact, joint attention, reciprocal turn-taking play, responding to a caregiver's emotional cues, and sustaining culturally appropriate social engagement — described as capacity versus everyday performance.
Try this at home
When documenting social interaction, separate capacity (what the child can do in a structured setting) from performance (what they do at home or preschool) — the ICF qualifiers make this distinction explicit and clinically meaningful.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
Is Social Interaction a body function or an activity in the ICF?
It is an Activities and Participation construct, not a Body Functions code. Social interaction describes what a child actually does when engaging with others in real-life situations, which is why it sits under Chapter 7 — Interpersonal interactions and relationships — at code d710, rather than among the mental-function (b-code) chapters.
What is the difference between d710 and d720?
d710 (Basic interpersonal interactions) covers foundational relating — showing consideration, responding to feelings, maintaining appropriate social space. d720 (Complex interpersonal interactions) covers higher-order skills such as regulating one's behaviour in interactions and forming and ending relationships. The particular-relationship codes (d730–d770) cover specific relationship types.
How does the ICF-CY adapt d710 for young children?
The Children & Youth derivation refines the qualifiers to early-developmental expressions — eye contact, joint attention, reciprocal play and the pre-verbal give-and-take that precedes conversation — so the same construct can be documented meaningfully across infancy and early childhood.
Why distinguish capacity from performance for social interaction?
Capacity reflects what a child can do in a standardised or supported setting; performance reflects what they actually do in their everyday environment. The gap between the two highlights where environmental support or intervention can improve participation, which is central to ICF-based goal setting.