Care-giver & Infant Interactions

    Cards (12)

    • define reciprocity
      • how two people interact with each other
      • a baby may show signals that elicit a response from the primary care-giver
      • they take turns to respond like a conversation
    • alert phases and research in reciprocity
      • babies have a periodic alert phase -> when they make a signal e.g. making eye contact to suggest that they are ready to interact
      • research shows that mother typically pick up on signals 2/3 of the time - Fieldman & Eildman 2007, but this can vary with environment e.g. stress - Finegood et al 2016
      • from 3 months old this interaction becomes more frequent and involves both the mother and baby paying close attention to each others verbal signs & facial expressions
    • psychologists believe that caregiver-infants interactions are important in the child's social development
    • define interactional synchrony
      • caregiver and baby reflect both their actions and emotions and do this in co-ordinated way.
      • carrying out the same action simultaneously - acting as a mirror
    • research into interactional synchrony - part 1
      • Meltzoff & Moore 1977 ->
      • observed that beginning of interactional synchrony in babies that are 2 weeks old.
      • When an adult would use o 1 of 3 facial expressions or gestures
      • the babies' response was recorded -> filmed and labelled by individual observers.
      • findings: significant associations between the adults expressions/gestures and the baby mirroring them
    • research into interactional synchrony part 2
      importance of attachment
      • interactional synchrony is important for the baby's development with an attchment to its caregiver
    • research into interactional synchrony part 3
      Isabella 1989
      • observed mothers and babies and assessed the degree of interactional synchrony
      • also assessed the quality of attachment between each mother and baby
      • findings: better levels of synchrony due to better levels of mother-baby attachment
    • strength of care-giver & infant interactions -> filmed observations
      strength: the filmed observations were conducted in a laboratory which minimizes the distractions because of the control within the study
      • key point: a baby's behavior doesn't change when they are being filmed
      • you can refer back to the footage when needed, and more than one person can review the footage to gain inter-rater/observer reliability
      this is a strength because the data collected with have validity and reliability (inter-rater reliability & internal validity)
    • limitation of care-giver interactions -> difficulty observing babies
      limitation: hard to interpret the babies' behaviour as they have no co-ordination as they are immobile
      • the behaviour of the baby via movement or expression cannot be defined as it is perspective
      this is a limitation because we cannot be certain if the behaviour seen through caregiver-infant interactions have a special meaning
    • weakness of care-giver interactions -> developmental importance
      weakness: observing a baby's behaviour doesn't tell us information about its development
      • Feldman 2012 - synchrony & implication reprocity see patterns in babies behaviour but not particularly useful -> no purpose
      this is a weakness because we cannot be certain that the behaviours seen in caregiver-infant interactions have a special meaning
    • counterpoint to developmental importance-> caregiver-infant interactions
      counterpoint: evidence from other lines of research to suggests that early interactions are important
      • Isabella et al 1989 ->found that achievement of interactional synchrony predicted development of good quality attachment
      this means that on balance, caregiver-infant interactions are probably important for development
    • discussion to caregiver-infant interactions -> Practical Value vs. Ethics
      discussion:
      research into caregiver-infant interaction has practical applications in parenting skill training
      • Crotwell 2013-> found that 10-minute parent-child interaction therapy improved interactional synchrony
      • sample was 20 low income mothers and pre-school children
      on the other hand: research into caregiver-infant interaction is socially sensitive because it can be used to argue when a mother should return back to work because it will be harmful to the baby if the attachment is not developed