caregiver interactions

Cards (6)

  • what is attachment
    • an emotional bond between two people
    • two-way process that endures overtime
    • it leads to certain behaviours
    • such as clinging and proximity seeking
    • it serves the function of protecting an infant
  • reciprocity
    • caregiver-infant interaction is a two-way/mutual process
    • each party responds to the other's signals to sustain interaction (turn-taking)
    • the behaviour of each party elicits a response from the other
    • eg, smiling back when someone smiles at us
  • jaffe et al.
    • studied infant-adult gaze behaviour in a free play setting with 6 4-month old infants. 27 separate play periods
    • infant-adult interaction were identical to those found in adult verbal conversations
    • results suggest some universal propriety of human communication which predates the onset of speech
  • interactional synchrony
    • two people are set to be synchronised when they carry put the same behaviour simultaneously. this includes imitating emotions as well as behaviours
    • it is temporal
    • co-ordination of micro-level
    • social behaviour
    • feldman (2009)
  • meltzoff and moore (1977) - observational research
    • Observed infant behaviour in response to four stimuli.
    • Recorded infant behaviour through real-time videotapes.
    • Independent observers judged the videos, not knowing the infant's response.
    • Noted instances of infant tongue protrusions and head movements.
    • Behavioural categories included mouth opening, termination of mouth opening, tongue protrusion, and termination of tongue protrusion.
    • Each observer scored the tapes twice for intra-observer and inter-observer reliability.
    • All scores were greater than .92.
  • meltzoff and moore - interactional synchrony
    • found infants imitate specific facial and hand gestures.
    • The study used an adult model to mimic the infant's movements.
    • A dummy was placed in the infant's mouth to prevent response.
    • The child's expression was recorded and compared to the adult model.
    • Meltzoff and Moore's 1983 study confirmed the same synchrony with infants as young as three days old.
    • This suggests that imitation behaviors are innate, not learned.