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Chapter 4. Socioemotional Development in Infancy PowerPoints developed by Nicholas Greco IV, College of Lake County, Grayslake, IL. What Are Emotions?.
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Chapter 4 Socioemotional Development in Infancy PowerPoints developed by Nicholas Greco IV, College of Lake County, Grayslake, IL (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
What Are Emotions? • Emotion-- feeling, or affect, that occurs when a person is in a state or an interaction that is important to him or her, especially to his or her well-being • Emotions involve an individual’s communication with the world • In infancy, it is the communication aspect that is at the forefront of emotion (Campos, 2009) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Classifying Emotions • Psychologists classify the broad range of emotions in many ways • Almost all classifications designate an emotion as either positive (pleasant) or negative (unpleasant) • Positive emotions include pleasant states such as happiness, joy, love, enthusiasm • Negative emotions include anxiety, anger, guilt, and sadness (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Biological and Environmental Influences • Emotions are influenced both by biological foundations and by a person's experience • Facial expressions of basic emotions such as happiness, surprise, anger, and fear are the same across cultures • Display rules—when, where, and how emotions should be expressed—are not culturally universal (Shiraev & Levy, 2010) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Early Emotions • In the first six months, infants may express surprise, interest, joy, anger, sadness, fear, and disgust • Other emotions appear in the second half of the first year and by the second year • jealousy, empathy, embarrassment, pride, shame, and guilt • these have been called self-conscious emotions or other-conscious emotions (Lewis, 2007; Saarni & others, 2006) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Emotional Expressions and Relationships • Emotional expressions -- infants’ first relationships • Infants communicate emotions and this enables coordinated interactions with their caregivers • Parents change their emotional expressions in response to infants’ emotional expressions • Infants also modify their emotional expressions in response to their parents’ emotional expressions (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Crying • Crying -- most important mechanism newborns have for communicating • Babies have at least three types of cries: • basic cry • some infancy experts believe that hunger is one of the conditions that incite the basic cry • anger cry • pain cry • the pain cry may be stimulated by physical pain or by any high-intensity stimulus (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Should Parents Respond to an Infant’s Cries? • Many developmentalists recommend that parents soothe a crying infant, especially in the first year • This reaction should help infants develop a sense of trust and secure attachment to the caregiver (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Smiles • Two types of smiling can be distinguished in infants: • Reflexive smile-- does not occur in response to external stimuli and appears during the first month after birth, usually during sleep • Social smile -- occurs in response to an external stimulus • Social smiling occurs as early as four months of age in response to a caregiver’s voice (Campos, 2005) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Fear • Fear -- one of a baby’s earliest emotions • first appears at about 6 months and peaks at about 18 months • abused and neglected infants can show fear as early as 3 months • stranger anxiety--most frequent expression of an infant’s fear • usually emerges gradually • depends on the social context and the characteristics of the stranger (Campos, 2005; Emde, Gaensbauer, & Harmon, 1976) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Frequency of Stranger Anxiety • Less stranger anxiety when they are in familiar settings • When infants feel secure, they are less likely to show stranger anxiety • Less fearful of child strangers than adult strangers • Less fearful of friendly, outgoing, smiling strangers than of passive, unsmiling strangers • Separation protest -- crying when the caregiver leaves (Bretherton, Stolberg, & Kreye, 1981) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Social Referencing • Social referencing -- reading emotional cues in others to help determine how to act in a particular situation • helps infants to interpret ambiguous situations more accurately • by the end of the first year, a parent’s facial expression influences exploration of an unfamiliar environment • social referencing improves in the second year of life (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Emotional Regulation and Coping • During the first year of life, infant develops ability to minimize the intensity and duration of emotional reactions • From early in infancy, babies put their thumbs in their mouths to self-soothe • In their second year, they may say things to themselves to help self-soothe (Eisenberg, Spinrad, & Smith, 2004) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Emotional Regulation and Coping • Caregivers’ actions influence the infant’s neurobiological regulation of emotions • Good strategy to soothe an infant before the infant gets into an intense, agitated, uncontrolled state • Later in infancy, infants sometimes redirect their attention or distract themselves in order to reduce their arousal (Laible & Thompson, 2007; de Haan & Gunnar, 2009; Thompson, 2006; Grolnick, Bridges, & Connell, 1996) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Contextual Adaptation • Contexts can influence emotional regulation • Often affected by fatigue, hunger, time of day, which people are around them, and where they are • Must learn to adapt to different contexts (Thompson, 2010) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Describing and Classifying Temperament • Researchers have described and classified the temperament of individuals in three different ways • Chess and Thomas’ Classification • Easy, difficult, and slow-to-warm-up child • Kagan’s Behavioral Inhibition • Inhibition to the unfamiliar • Effortful Control (Self-Regulation) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Effortful Control (Self-Regulation) • Effortful control (self-regulation) is an important dimension of temperament • Infants high on effortful control show an ability to keep their arousal from getting too high and have strategies for soothing themselves • Infants low on effortful control are often unable to control their arousal; they are easily agitated and become intensely emotional (Bates, 2008) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Biological Foundations and Influences • Children inherit a physiology that biases them to have a particular type of temperament • Physiological characteristics have been linked with different temperaments • Inhibited temperament is associated with a unique physiological pattern • high and stable heart rate • high level of the hormone cortisol • high activity in the right frontal lobe of the brain (Kagan, 2010) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Gender, Culture, and Temperament • Parents may have different reactions to temperament, depending on the sex of the baby • Reaction to temperament may depend in part on culture • Many aspects of a child’s environment can encourage or discourage the persistence of temperament characteristics ) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Goodness of Fit and Implications for Parenting • Goodness of fit-- the match between temperament and the environmental demands with which child must cope • Children differ from each other very early in life • differences have important implications for parent-child interaction • attention to and respect for individuality • structure the child’s environment • avoid applying negative labels to the child (Putnam, Sanson, & Rothbart, 2002) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Personality Development • Personality -- the enduring personal characteristics of individuals • Emotions and temperament form key aspects • Trust • Erikson -- first year of life is characterized by the trust versus mistrust stage/crisis • Identity -- sense of who they are and what makes them different from everyone else (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Self-Recognition • Infants begin to develop a rudimentary form of self-recognition -- being attentive and positive toward one’s image in a mirror as early as 3 months • A more complete index of self-recognition -- the ability to recognize one’s physical features • emerges in the second year (Pipp, Fischer, & Jennings, 1987; Thompson, 2006) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Independence • Erikson (1968) stressed that independence is an important issue in the second year of life • Erikson’s second stage of development is identified as “autonomy versus shame and doubt” • autonomy builds as the infant’s mental and motor abilities develop • when caregivers are impatient and do for toddlers what they are capable of doing themselves, shame and doubt develop (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Social Orientation • Infants are captivated by the social world early in development • Face-to-face play characterizes caregiver-infant interactions at about 2 to 3 months of age • Their interaction with peers increases considerably in the latter half of the second year • Between 18 to 24 months, imitative and reciprocal play increases (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Attachment • Attachment-- a close emotional bond between two people • Freud theorized that infants become attached to the person or object that provides oral satisfaction • Harry Harlow’s classic study • Four phases based on Bowlby’s conceptualization of attachment • Phase 1: From birth to 2 months • Phase 2: From 2 to 7 months • Phase 3: From 7 to 24 months • Phase 4: From 24 months on (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Theories of Attachment • Bowlby -- belief in an internal working modelof attachment • a simple mental model of the caregiver, their relationship, and the self as deserving of nurturant care • Mary Ainsworth (1979) created the Strange Situation • the degree to which the caregiver’s presence provides the infant with security and confidence (Thompson, 2006; Ainsworth, 1979) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Individual Differences in Attachment • Based on how babies respond in the Strange Situation • securely attached babies use the caregiver as a secure base • insecure avoidant babies show insecurity by avoiding the mother • insecure resistant babies often cling to the caregiver and then resist fighting against the closeness • insecure disorganized babies -- disorganized and disoriented (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Criticisms of Attachment Theory • Kagan and others believe that too much emphasis has been placed on the attachment bond in infancy • Jerome Kagan sees infants as highly resilient and adaptive • they are equipped to stay on a positive developmental course • Attachment theory ignores the diversity of socializing agents and contexts in an infant’s world (Kagan, 1987, 2002) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Social Contexts: The Family • A constellation of subsystems • complex whole made up of interrelated, interacting parts • defined in terms of generation, gender, role • subsystems have reciprocal influences on each other • marital relations, parenting, and infant behavior and development can have both direct and indirect effects on each other (Jay Belsky,1981) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Reciprocal Socialization • Socialization that is bidirectional • children socialize parents just as parents socialize children • Scaffolding -- timing interactions so that the infant experiences turn-taking with the parents • scaffolding involves parental behavior that supports children’s efforts • caregivers provide a positive, reciprocal framework for interaction (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Maternal and Paternal Caregiving • Mothers spend considerably more time in caregiving with infants and children than do fathers • Mothers are more likely to have managerial role • Fathers have the ability to act sensitively and responsively with their infants • Typical father behaves differently toward an infant than the typical mother • Father’s presence in a child’s life is beneficial • Leads to more success in school (Lamb, 2010; Parke & Buriel, 2006) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Parental Leave • More young children are in child care than at any other time in U.S. history • U.S. adults tend not to receive paid leave to care for their young children • The United States allows up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave for parents who are caring for a newborn • The European Union has mandated a 14-week maternity leave (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Variations in Child Care • Factors that influence the effects of child care • the age of the child • the type of child care • the quality of the program (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Types of Child Care • Large centers with elaborate facilities • Private homes • Commercial operations or nonprofit centers run by churches, civic groups, and employers • Child care providers vary • Professionals • Untrained adults who want to earn extra money (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Quality of Care Makes a Difference • Poor-quality child care is more likely for families with few resources (psychological, social, and economic) • Extensive child care was harmful to low-income children only when the care was of low quality • High-quality care was linked with fewer internalizing problems (e.g., anxiety) and externalizing problems (e.g., aggressive and destructive behaviors) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
Strategies to Follow in Choosing Child Care • Recognize that the quality of your parenting is a key factor in your child’s development • Make decisions that will improve the likelihood you will be good parents • Monitor your child’s development • Take some time to find the best child care (Kathleen McCartney, 2003) (c) 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.