Caregiver-Infant Interactions

    Cards (13)

    • What is the definition of attachment?
      A close emotional bond between two people
    • How is attachment shown in behavior?
      Through strong emotional bonds over time
    • What is the definition of reciprocity?
      Each person responds and elicits a response
    • What are the components of reciprocity?
      • Alert phase: Babies signal readiness for interaction
      • Active involvement: Caregiver and baby take turns initiating interaction
    • How did Brazleton describe mother-infant interactions?
      As a 'dance' where both play active roles
    • What is the definition of interactional synchronicity?
      Actions and emotions mirror each other
    • What was the procedure in Meltzoff and Moore's study on interactional synchronicity?
      • Adult model displayed facial expressions or hand movements
      • Dummy placed in infant's mouth to prevent response
      • Dummy removed, infant's expression filmed
    • What did Meltzoff and Moore find regarding infant behavior?
      There was an association with adult model behavior
    • What does the ability to mirror indicate according to Meltzoff and Moore?
      It is an innate behavior for communication
    • What were the findings of Isabella et al regarding synchrony?
      • Observed 30 mothers and infants
      • Higher synchrony linked to better attachment quality
      • Securely attached pairs showed more synchrony in the first year
    • C-I Interactions AO3 - Questionable Reliability

      • What is being observed is merely hand movements of changes in expression
      • Cannot be certain that the infants were actually engaging in interactional synchrony or reciprocity
      • Piaget - true imitation (interactional synchrony) is developed at the end of the first year and anything before this was response training (infant repeating behaviour that was rewarded as a results of operant conditioning). Piaget believed that infants behaviour was pseudo imitation - the infant had not consciously translated what they see into a matching movement
    • C-I Interactions AO3 - Fine detail
      • Controlled observations often capture fine details, with both the mother and infant being filmed, often from multiple angles
      • This ensures that fine details of behaviour can be recorded and later analysed
      • Babies are unaware that they are being observed so their behaviour does not change in response to controlled observations which is generally a problem for observational research
      • This is a strength because it means that the research has high internal validity as it is measuring what it is intending to measure
    • C-I Interactions AO3 - Not found in all cultures

      • Le Vine et al reported that Kenyan mothers have little physical interactions or physical contact with their infants but such infants have high proportions of secure attachments
      • This means that the research may be ethnocentric and therefore cannot be generalised to a wider population
    See similar decks