Literature DB >> 11547913

How do mothers signal shared feeling-states to their infants? An investigation of affect attunement and imitation during the first year of life.

C O Jonsson1, D N Clinton, M Fahrman, G Mazzaglia, S Novak, K Sörhus.   

Abstract

The present study examined how mothers signal shared feeling-states to their infants. Affect attunement and imitation were investigated cross-culturally in 39 mother-infant dyads from Sweden (N = 22) and the former Yugoslavia (N = 17) during the first year of life. Video-recordings of playful interaction between mothers and their infants were analysed using the Affect Attunement Protocol. A significant negative association between imitation and age was found, while there was a significant positive association between affect attunement and age. Single occurrences of affect attunement appeared already at two or three months of age, and by 6 months of age episodes of affect attunement were more common than imitation. Frequencies of imitation and affect attunement were similar cross-culturally and in terms of gender, although there was a significant interaction between age and gender. The results suggest that the signalling of shared feeling-states is not a static process. Mothers do not signal shared feeling-states in the same manner at different ages. Imitation is the most important process during the earliest months, but is superseded by affect attunement earlier than previously thought. The functional implications of this developmental variation are discussed.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11547913     DOI: 10.1111/1467-9450.00249

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Scand J Psychol        ISSN: 0036-5564


  7 in total

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