Title: Basic Concepts of Infant Behavior and Development
1Basic Concepts of Infant Behavior and Development
Created by Ilse DeKoeyer-Laros
2Overview Chapter 1
- The Importance of Infancy
- A Brief History of Babies
- The Scientific Perspective
- Research Methods in Developmental Science
- Experimental Research Methods
- Observational Research Methods
- Qualitative Research Methods
- Policies and Practices
3The Importance of Infancy
- Education for parents, caregivers, clinicians
- Infancy Is a unique period in life
- Preverbal experience of the body is uniquely
human - Reexperiencing infant-like states can be healing
rejuvenating - Improving health by early prevention
- Informed public policy
- Origins of individual differences
4A Brief History of Babies
- Early Civilizations
- Greeks Romans advocated harsh practices to
shape infants bodies (to build moral character)
and practiced infanticide - Middle Ages Renaissance
- urbanization the spread of Christianity brought
changes - Renaissance (14501650) first written
child-rearing philosophies
5A Brief History of Babies
- The Enlightenment (18th century)
- Romanticism (Rousseau) Empiricism (Locke)
- both emphasized the value of children revived
the importance of the body - 19th century
- the nuclear family emerged (mainly in white
ethnic groups) - social changes related to medical advances in
infant care
6Infants Enter the World of Science
- Nature-nurture debate sparked scientific study
- Arnold Gesell (1880-1961)
- believed in genetic maturation (nature)
- focused on the average child
- John B. Watson (18781958)
- children can be trained to do almost anything
(nurture) - lasting imprint on North American society
- Sigmund Freud (18561939)
- focused on psychological experience
- recognized that infants experience emotions, feel
the need for love, possess powerful desires
7Today
- Theories of infant care development spread
rapidly through Western culture demand for
expert behavioral scientists rose
8Today
- 1970s research was in the empiricist tradition,
but focused on learning cognitive development
not the whole child - The Competent Infant (1973) reflected desire to
discover the earliest signs of intelligence
belief that education is the best guarantee of
child success - The individual child became lost
- Emphasis on mental development led to a less
balanced view of the whole child (body, emotions
social connections)
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9Today
- Since 1990s, shift back to the whole child
- parent-child relationships
- emotional development
- the role of the body touch
- communication language
- also, focus on neuroscience, behavior genetics
10The Scientific Perspectiveon Infancy
- Scientists strive to understand infants in their
own right, detached from social cultural
conceptions about infancy - but this is not completely possible
11Topics in infancy research
- perceptual/sensorial
- sensorimotor/tool using
- conceptual/thinking
- representational/symbolic
- communicative/linguistic
- social/interactive
- expressive/emotive
- self-regulatory/coping
12Stages Changes
- Developmental changes
- are not reversible earlier patterns of
behavior, thought, feeling cannot be easily
recognized - are stable new organized patterns that persist
over relatively long periods of months or years - occur in a sequence that is similar across
infants - The division of infancy into stages of
development is somewhat arbitrary depends on
the purposes of the culture or group
13Research Methods in Developmental Science
- Scientists
- rely on many sources of evidence
- try to separate what is repeatable stable from
what is coincidental - attempt to rid observations of bias
- Research methods
- Quantitative representing complex behavioral
processes with a numerical index (a variable) - Qualitative attempting to capture the meaning
or quality of the behavior while maintaining a
scientific stance
14Experimental Research Methods
- Experiment a study in which one aspect of the
situation is manipulated while all other aspects
are held constant or controlled - independent variable that which is controlled or
manipulated the presumed cause of the
phenomenon - dependent variable the outcome behavior that is
observed in response to the changes in the
independent variable
15Experimental Research Methods
- Standard experimental procedures
- control groups that do not receive any
manipulation are compared to groups that receive
the experimental manipulation - contrast groups different groups that each
receive a different type of manipulation are
compared - random assignment a random process, like a flip
of a coin, used to assign subjects to groups
16Experimental Research Methods
- Testing perception cognition in infants
- paired-preference tests researchers determine
which of two stimuli is preferred by the infants - habituation procedures decline in looking time
over repeated trials of the same stimulus - recovery is the abrupt increase in looking time
after a change in the stimulus - response-contingent procedures infants are
trained to change their behavior if they can
detect certain features of stimuli will alter
their behavior in order to receive their favorite
stimulus (e.g., a certain taste)
17Physiological Recording
- One method of discovering more about babies,
since they cannot report on their internal states
can be used for experimental observational
research
18Physiological Recording
- Automatic recording of behavior includes
- measurements of heart rate, respiration, brain
activity, hormonal activity, aspects of
behavior (movement, gaze direction) - Limitations
- hard to know the precise meaning of a change in a
physiological measure - physiological activity is itself a response it
is impossible to say when where a response
originates or is encoded in the body
19Observational Research Methods
- Rely on natural variations create contrast
groups
Types of studies Longitudinal studies the same children at different ages
Types of studies Cross-sectional studies different children at different ages
Types of variables Predictor variable the presumed cause
Types of variables Outcome variable the presumed effect
20Bias Research Ethics
- Bias is reduced by attention to reliability,
validity, observer bias, representative samples - Researchers need to observe ethical guidelines
when using human subjects in research - since infants cannot provide informed consent to
participate in research, their parents must do so - researchers must pledge to keep the subjects
identity confidential to limit access to their
data only to those persons directly involved with
the research
21Observational Research Methods
- Microanalysis focuses on minute changes in
behavior - For example, coding emotional expressions of an
infant second by second - Macroanalysis focuses on the overall or summary
features of behavior, usually with the use of
rating scales - For example, rating the main emotional quality of
an infants expression over a 10-minute period
22Qualitative Research Methods
- Characterized by one or both of the following
- the observers focus on the meaning of the
situation for the participants - the role of the researcher is taken explicitly
into account - Examines the situation in its broader context
- Credibility depends upon researchers skill,
experience, rigor
23Qualitative Research Methods
- Constant comparative method the same observers
go over the data many times to check revise
their interpretation - Case study the same child is observed over a
long period of time - more information about individual children, but
not generalizable to larger groups
24To conclude
- Research on infants is above all a human
enterprise, a relationship between
scientist-persons and subject-persons. Every
research study is, therefore, a particular point
of view on nature (p. 37)
25Policies and PracticesResearch for the Real World
- Parens patriae (legal concept) children are
viewed as their parents possessions the
government may only interfere in extreme
circumstances of abuse neglect - public funds are typically allocated for only the
most needy cases - there are very few government programs to
guarantee basic health care education for the
majority of children under 3 years
26Table 1.2 Federal Programs in the United States
to Assist Infants and their Families
Program Purpose
Medicaid Covers pre-natal care for mothers postnatal for infants
Supplemental Nutrition for Women, Infants, Children (WIC) Provides food vouchers up to 5 years old
Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) Provides some financial support to families of children under 3 years
Earned Income Tax Credit (EIC) Provides tax refunds for working poor families
State programs of child welfare Prevents or protects children from abuse neglect
Early Head Start Promotes early child development for poor children under 3 years-old
Parental Leave Parents can take up to 12 weeks off work without penalty but usually without pay.
Sources Barrett (2001), Phillips McCartney
(2005)
27Policies and PracticesResearch for the Real World
- Societies differ in how much of their public
funds go to the welfare of children their
families. - many countries use tax funds to support infant
health care nutrition, child care, and parental
leave - the U.S. is unique in its reluctance to support
infant development as a national policy its
reliance on volunteer child and family advocacy - for the benefit of children their families,
advocates must help change policies and
researchers policy makers need to work together
28Table 1.3 Differences between policy makers and
scientists
Policy Makers Scientists
Serve their constituencies Seek the truth
Act decide Understand explain
Based on relationships between key players Non-personal, unbiased
Based on power influence Based on knowledge
Immediate actions Long-term work
Mistakes are punished Rewarded for experimenting
Communication is oral Communication is written reviewed
Sources Maton Bishop-Josef (2006), Solarz
(2001)