Literature DB >> 7471921

Maternal stimulation and infant exploratory competence: cross-sectional, correlational, and experimental analyses.

J Belsky, M K Goode, R K Most.   

Abstract

Research on maternal influence on infant development is criticized on the basis of its limited ability to make strong causal claims. 2 observational studies are then presented; 1 details, cross-sectionally, developmental changes in strategies of maternal stimulation and infant exploration and the interrelationship of these domains of parent and child behavior; the other tests, experimentally, the hypothesis that maternal stimulation fosters infant exploratory competence. Results of the first study reveal: (1) a linear increase in mother's verbal attention-focusing behavior and a curvilinear trend in physical attention-focusing strategies between 9 and 18 months; (2) linear increases in a variety of measures of infant exploration; and (3) positive associations between naturalistically observed maternal stimulation and infant exploratory competence. The experimental study demonstrates that infant exploratory skill, as measured both naturalistically and during a semistructured, free-play assessment, is positively influenced by the enhancement of maternal stimulation. These latter results are discussed in terms of infant stimulation programs.

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Year:  1980        PMID: 7471921

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Dev        ISSN: 0009-3920


  11 in total

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8.  Social Competence in Infants and Toddlers with Special Health Care Needs: The Roles of Parental Knowledge, Expectations, Attunement, and Attitudes toward Child Independence.

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9.  Handling newborn monkeys alters later exploratory, cognitive, and social behaviors.

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10.  Stabilities of Infant Behaviors and Maternal Responses to Them.

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