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Socioemotional Development in Infancy

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Title: Chapter Six Emotional and Social Development in Infancy and Toddlerhood Author: Joseph and Elaine Rizzo Last modified by: dsymons Created Date – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Socioemotional Development in Infancy


1
Socioemotional Development in Infancy
  • Chapter 6

2
EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
  • Basic emotions, such as happiness, interest,
    surprise, fear, anger, sadness, and disgust, are
    directly inferred from facial expressions.
  • An emotion or affect that can involve
    physiological arousal, conscious experience, or
    behavioral expression

3
What is the emotional state of this baby?Carroll
Izards MAX System can be used to code
4
Emotions emerge in sequence
  • Social smile
  • Evoked by the stimulus of the human face
  • First appears between 4 and 6 weeks
  • Anger, surprise, sadness
  • First appears around 3 to 4 months in response to
    active stimuli.
  • Shame 6 to 8 months
  • Contempt 2 years

5
Negative Emotions
  • Anger is expressed during the first months when
    babies cry in response to unpleasant experiences
    (4-6 months).
  • Expressions of sadness are usually less frequent
    than anger.
  • Fear rises during the second half of the first
    year.
  • cause and effect
  • stranger anxiety

6
Why is this baby crying?
  • Could be out of anger, pain, or unknown reasons

7
Can babies imitate emotions? (Meltzoff)
8
Understanding and Responding to the Emotions of
Others
  • Emotion Contagion (birth)
  • Social referencing (1 year)
  • Infant relies on a trusted person's emotional
    reaction in an uncertain situation.
  • By toddlerhood, children use emotional signals to
    infer others internal states and guide their own
    actions.

9
Emergence of Self-Conscious Emotions
  • At the end of the second year (18-24 months)
  • Child needs to have a self-concept
  • Injury to or enhancement of the sense of self
  • Embarassment, guilt, envy, pride
  • Helps children to acquire values of society

10
Beginnings of Emotional Self-Regulation
  • Emotional self-regulation refers to the
    strategies used to adjust emotional states to a
    comfortable level of intensity.
  • Infants have only limited capacity to regulate
    their emotional states.
  • By the end of the first year, babies ability to
    move around permits them to regulate feelings
    more effectively by approaching or retreating
    from various stimuli.

11
End of lecture 1
12
TEMPERAMENT AND DEVELOPMENT
  • Temperament
  • stable individual differences in quality and
    intensity of emotional reaction, activity level,
    attention, and emotional self-regulation.
  • New York Longitudinal Study (Thomas Chess,
    1956) indicates
  • Temperament predicts adjustment.
  • Parenting can modify emotional styles.

13
Structure of Temperament
  • Easy child (40)
  • Quickly establishes regular routines in infancy,
    is generally cheerful, and adapts easily to new
    experiences
  • Difficult child (10)
  • Irregular in daily routines, is slow to accept
    new experiences, and tends to react negatively
    and intensely
  • Slow-to-warm-up child (15)
  • Inactive, shows mild reactions to stimuli, is
    negative, and adjusts slowly to new experiences

14
Measuring Temperament
  • Assessed through
  • Parent interviews and questionnaires
  • Behavior ratings by medical professionals or
    caregivers
  • Direct researcher observation
  • Physiological measures supplement these
    techniques.
  • Heart rate, hormone levels, and EEG waves in the
    frontal cortex differentiate children with
    inhibited and uninhibited temperamental styles.

15
Genetic Influences
  • Twin studies reveal that identicals are more
    similar than fraternals.
  • About half the individual differences among us
    can be traced to differences in our genetic
    make-up.
  • Ethnic and sex differences in early temperament
    exist, implying a role for heredity.

16
Environmental Influences
  • Differences in temperament are encouraged by
    cultural beliefs and practice.
  • Parents encourage infant sons to be physically
    active and daughters to seek help and closeness.
  • When one child in a family is viewed as easy,
    another is perceived as difficult.

17
Temperament and Child Rearing The
Goodness-of-Fit Model
  • The goodness-of-fit model
  • Goodness-of-fit is an effective match between
    child-rearing environments and a childs
    temperament, leading to healthy adjustment.
  • Difficult infants are less likely than easy
    babies to receive sensitive care.

18
Goodness-of-fit person X environment interaction
Irritable Baby
Parenting Unstable Stable
Baby More Fussy Less Fussy
Parent Poor coping Good coping
Toddler Negative Happy
Fussy Calm
19
Personality Development
  • Erikson
  • Basic trust versus mistrust
  • Dilemma is resolved positively if caregiving is
    sympathetic and loving.
  • Erikson
  • Autonomy versus Shame and Doubt
  • Resolved positively if parents provide suitable
    guidance and appropriate choices

20
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21
Personality Development
  • Development of the Self
  • Emergence of the I-Self and the Me-Self
  • I-selfthe sense of self as subject, or agent,
    who is separate from but acts on other objects
    and people.
  • me-selfa reflective observer that considers the
    self an object of knowledge and evaluation
    (during 2nd year).
  • Development of the me-self permits toddlers to
    compare themselves to other people.
  • Self-awareness is accompanied by empathy

22
Watson, 1972 The Game
23
What is a relationship like in which the other
person completely ignores you?
  • What about completely obeys you?

24
Emergence of Self-Control
  • Self-control is the capacity to resist an impulse
    to engage in socially disapproved behavior.
  • The first signs of self-control appear as
    compliancevoluntary obedience to adult requests
    and commands.

25
ATTACHMENT THEORY
26
Harry Harlow Rhesus Monkeys
27
Attachment theory
  • Emotional bonds between people have adaptive
    significance, develop through an interactional
    history, and influence personality development
  • History Spitz and WWII orphans Harry Harlow
    and rhesus monkeys Lorenz and his ducks Genie
    and deprivation sabre-tooth tigers
  • Bowlby Attachment, Separation, and Loss
  • The nature of emotional bond between the infant
    and the caregiver

28
John Bowlby Self and other as a secure base
http//www.psychology.sunysb.edu/attachment/
29
Young infants need caregivers for contact,
security, and distress resolution
  • Separation anxiety distress when left alone
  • Distress when strangers or other threats are
    around
  • Social referencing
  • Categories of infant caregiver relationships can
    be described from how children depend on and act
    within relationships

30
Development of Attachment
  • Preattachment phase (birth to 6 weeks)
  • Signals such as smiling and crying bring the baby
    into close contact.
  • Attachment-in-the-making phase (6 weeks to 6-8
    months)
  • Respond differently to a familiar caregiver than
    to a stranger

31
Development of Attachment
  • Clearcut attachment (6 to 8 months to 18 months
    to 2 years)
  • Attachment to caregiver is evident.
  • Separation anxiety Upset at the departure of a
    familiar caregiver
  • Caregivers provide secure base from which they
    can explore.

32
Mary Ainsworth Self, sensitivity, and security
Strange Situation Measures attachment between 1
and 2 years Involves short separations from and
reunions with the parent
33
Patterns in Infancy Ainsworths Strange
Situation
  • Insecure-Avoidant (A) No distress or
    proximity-seeking, no distinction between mother
    and stranger, Detached
  • Secure (B) Distress resolved, proximity-seeking
  • Insecure-Resistant (C) Distress not resolved,
    ambivalent proximity-seeking, Clingy babies
  • Insecure-Disorganised (D) Dazed, confused, and
    fearful (e.g., maltreated toddlers)

34
Maasi in africa Attachment theory is
cross-cultural
35
Development of Attachment
  • Formation of a reciprocal relationship (18 months
    to 2 years and on)
  • Separation anxiety decreases.

36
Cultural Variations
  • German parents encourage infants to be
    independent.
  • German infants show more avoidant attachment.
  • Japanese mothers rarely leave babies in the care
    of strange people.
  • Japanese infants display more resistant
    attachment responses.

37
Quality of Caregiving
  • Secure infants mothers respond promptly to
    infants, are positive, and handle babies
    tenderly.
  • Insecure infants mothers dislike contact, handle
    them awkwardly, and are insensitive.
  • Avoidant infants receive caregiving that is
    overstimulating and intrusive.
  • Child abuse and neglect are associated with all
    three forms of insecure attachment.
  • Quality of Daycare (Howe Jacobs, 1995)
  • Well trained stable staff, small group size/high
    adultchild ratio, structured day, high emphasis
    on interaction

38
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39
Attachment in context
  • Parental work status does not predict attachment
  • Emotional adjustment of the parent (e.g., family
    stress and conflict) is important
  • Quality of non-parental care is important
  • Relationship quality becomes internalizes and
    influences later adult and romantic relationships
  • AAI Dismissing, Autonomous, Preoccupied
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