| Literature DB >> 33346693 |
Mette Skovgaard Væver1, Katharina Cordes1, Anne Christine Stuart1, Anne Tharner2, Dana Shai3, Rose Spencer4, Johanne Smith-Nielsen1.
Abstract
Parental Embodied Mentalizing (PEM) captures the parent's capacity to extrapolate the child's mental states from movement and respond on a nonverbal level. Little is known about PEM's relation to other established measures of parent-child interactive behavior, such as maternal sensitivity and attachment. This is investigated in a sample of four months old infants and mothers with (n = 27) and without a diagnosis of postpartum depression (n = 44). Video-recorded infant-mother interactions were coded independently using PEM and Coding Interactive Behavior. Attachment was assessed at 13 months using the Strange Situation Procedure. Sensitivity and PEM was positively associated, but only sensitivity predicted attachment security and only the nonclinical group. This indicates that PEM and sensitivity are moderately related as well as capturing different aspects of infant-mother interactions. The study confirms previous findings of sensitivity predicting attachment in nonclinical groups. More research is required to further understand predictors of attachment in clinical samples.Entities:
Keywords: Postpartum depression; infant attachment security; infant-mother Interaction; maternal sensitivity; parental embodied mentalizing
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33346693 DOI: 10.1080/14616734.2020.1861035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Attach Hum Dev ISSN: 1461-6734