| Literature DB >> 33343435 |
Theano Kokkinaki1, Vassilis G S Vasdekis2.
Abstract
The present study investigates the way infants express their emotions in relation to parental feelings between maternal and paternal questions and direct requests. We therefore compared interpersonal engagement accompanying parental questions and direct requests between infant-mother and infant-father interactions. We video-recorded spontaneous communication between 11 infant-mother and 11 infant-father dyads-from the 2nd to the 6th month-in their home. The main results of this study are summarized as follows: (a) there are similarities in the way preverbal infants use their affections in spontaneous interactions with their mothers and fathers to express signs of sensitivity in sharing knowledge through questions and direct requests; and (b) the developmental trajectories of face-to-face emotional coordination in the course of parental questions descend in a similar way for both parents across the age range of this study. Regarding the developmental trajectories of emotional non-coordination, there is evidence of a linear trend in terms of age difference between the parents' gender with fathers showing the steeper slope. The results are discussed in relation to the theory of intersubjectivity.Entities:
Keywords: direct requests; emotions; facial expressions; infancy; innate intersubjectivity; interpersonal engagement; questions
Year: 2020 PMID: 33343435 PMCID: PMC7744289 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.523551
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Demographic information for the sample.
| Mean | Range | ||
| Mother Age (years) | 29.36 | 5.12 | 21–39 |
| Mother Education (years) | 14.36 | 2.33 | 12–18 |
| Father Age (years) | 33.63 | 5.69 | 27–47 |
| Father Education (years) | 14.36 | 2.33 | 12–18 |
| Birth Weight (kg) | 3.568 | 487.47 | 2,800–4,250 |
| Birth Height (cm) | 52.22 | 2,160 | 48–55 |
| Breastfeeding (days) | 77.71 | 74.40 | 14–180 |
| Male/Female | 5 (45.5%) male and 6 (54.5%) female | ||
| Way of Delivery | 8 (72.7) vaginal deliveries and 3 (27.3%) caesarian sections | ||
| Birth Order | 7 (63.7%) first-born and 4 (36.3%) second-born | ||
| Family Composition | Two-parent families | ||
| Paternal presence at labor and birth | 36.4% | ||
| Caretaking | Mother was the primary caretaker and father was the secondary caretaker for 4 infants (36.4%). For the remaining 7 infants (63.6%) other persons (such as grandmother, grandfathers, aunt and nanny) took care of them along with their parents | ||
| Marital Status | Married | ||
| Socio-economic Status | Middle-class families | ||
Description of focus categories with thematic sequences of parental infant-directed speech.
| Description of Thematic Sequences | |
| Infant-Focus | In response to, or description of infant’s internal state, external and physiological state, and infant’s body movements. Infant internal state thematic sequences included the description of attention/gaze behavior, emotion(s), communicative ability, desire(s), autonomy, character/temperament, knowledge/thought process/memory/learning, or the parent was talking from the infant’s perspective. Infant external state thematic sequences either described infant appearance or expressed admiration for it. |
| Dyad-focus | The parent attempts to communicate with the infant, or to describe the dyadic and bi-directional emotional/behavioral exchange and sharing of expressive behaviors (e.g., emotions, gaze direction), physiological states, body parts, appearance, and position in space. |
| Parent-focus | In reference to maternal/paternal behavior(s), emotion(s), and desire(s). |
| Other-focus | Comments on an external situation, on an object/toy, or on a third person. |
Definitions of the qualities of emotional valence and the categories of direction of emotional intensity change.
| Qualities of emotional valence | |
| Positive emotional valence | (+++) pleasure to the partner, (++) pleasure to inanimate world, (+) interest directed to the partner |
| Neutral emotional valence | (0) neutral facial expression and interest directed to external world |
| Negative emotional valence | (−) negative facial expression |
| Ascending emotional intensity | The quality of emotional valence of one partner at the end of the subunit of analysis is |
| Descending emotional intensity | The quality of emotional valence of one partner at the end of the subunit of analysis is |
| Fluctuating emotional intensity | the emotional valence of one partner in the beginning and at the end of the subunit of analysis is the |
DIAGRAM 1An example of micro analysis of facical expressions of emotions in the course of maternal questions in a spontaneous interaction of a 2-month-old infant with his mother.
Summary table of Model Selection Analysis; LRT tests statistical equation with Saturated Model.
| Triplets of characteristics of interest | Interactions remaining in finally chosen model | LRT ( |
| (1) Infant Em. Shifts-Parental Em. Shifts-Parental Gender | Infant Em. Shifts*Parental Em. Shifts, Parental Em. Shifts*Parental Gender | 23.628 (<0.001), 6.43 (0.040) |
| (2) Infant Positive Em. Exp.-Parental Em. Exp.-Parental Gender | Infant Pos. Em. Exp.*Parental Em. Exp.*Parental Gender | 5.203 (0.023) |
| (3) Infant Negative Em. Exp.-Parental Em. Exp.-Parental Gender | Infant Neg. Em. Exp *Parental Em. Exp., Parental Gender *Infant Neg. Em. Exp. | 129.799 (<0.001), 45.03 (<0.001) |
| (4) Infant Em. Intensity- Parental Em. Intensity-Parental Gender | Infant Em. Intensity* Parental Em. I ntensity | 37.76 (<0.001) |
| (5) Infant Em. Shifts-Parental Em. Shifts-Parental Gender | Parental Em. Shifts*Parental Gender | 11.560 (0.003) |
| (6) Infant Positive Em. Exp.-Parental Em. Exp.-Parental Gender | Infant Pos. Em. Exp.*Parental Em. Exp., Infant Pos. Em. Exp.* Parental Gender | 8.38 (0.004), 5.44 (0.020) |
| (7) Infant Negative Em. Exp.-Parental Em. Exp.-Parental Gender | Infant Neg. Em. Exp *Parental Em. Exp., Parental Gender *Infant Neg. Em. Exp. | 43.46 (<0.001), 10.42 (0.005) |
| (8) Infant Em. Intensity- Parental Em. Intensity-Parental Gender | Infant Em. Intensity* Parental Em. I ntensity, | 11.83 (0.019) |
FIGURE 1Developmental curves of pleasure and interest emotional matching in the course of parental infant-directed questions across the age range of this study (2nd to 6th month of infant’s life).
FIGURE 2Developmental curves of emotional non-coordination in the course of parental infant-directed questions across the age range of this study (2nd to 6th month of infant’s life).