Infants in groups: A paradigm for the study of early social experience

被引:42
|
作者
Selby, JM [1 ]
Bradley, BS
机构
[1] Univ Newcastle, Bloomfield Hosp, Ctr Rural & Remote Mental Hlth, Orange, NSW 2800, Australia
[2] Charles Sturt Univ, Bathurst, NSW 2795, Australia
关键词
attachment; group paradigm; infants; interpretation; inter-subjectivity; qualitative research;
D O I
10.1159/000070370
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
This paper reports on a two-stage, case-based analysis of infant sociability in infant-only trios to illustrate how findings made using this approach extend our theoretical understanding of early intersubjectivity. Studying infant groups allows us to address three kinds of emerging theoretical argument: (1) that babies are born with a 'general relational capacity' which complements or even founds the more specific 'dyadic program' that generates attachments; (2) that infants' communication with peers is the best route to understanding the shared meanings that inform language acquisition, and (3) that the reconceptualisation of 'nonbasic' emotions requires we discover whether babies are communicatively competent to elaborate context-specific meanings over time. The materials we use to illustrate this two-stage approach show infants manifest core characteristics of group-communication in the second six months of life, in particular the capacity to be involved with more than one person at a time and for relational encounters to shift behavioral significances for the infants as a product of group interactions. Copyright (C) 2003 S. Karger AG, Basel.
引用
收藏
页码:197 / 221
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Early Social Experience and Individual Differences in Infants' Joint Attention
    Gaffan, Elizabeth A.
    Martins, Carla
    Healy, Sarah
    Murray, Lynne
    SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT, 2010, 19 (02) : 369 - 393
  • [2] Social Experience, Social Attention and Word Learning in an Overhearing Paradigm
    Shneidman, Laura A.
    Buresh, Jennifer Sootsman
    Shimpi, Priya M.
    Knight-Schwarz, Jennifer
    Woodward, Amanda L.
    LANGUAGE LEARNING AND DEVELOPMENT, 2009, 5 (04) : 266 - 281
  • [3] Predicting social experience from dyadic interaction dynamics: the BallGame, a novel paradigm to study social engagement
    Luebbert, Annika
    Sengelmann, Malte
    Heimann, Katrin
    Schneider, Till R.
    Engel, Andreas K.
    Goeschl, Florian
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2024, 14 (01):
  • [4] PARADIGM FOR STUDY OF SOCIAL STRATA
    COLEMAN, JA
    SOCIOLOGY AND SOCIAL RESEARCH, 1966, 50 (03): : 339 - 350
  • [5] Infants' responses to facial and vocal emotional signals in a social referencing paradigm
    Mumme, DL
    Fernald, A
    Herrera, C
    CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 1996, 67 (06) : 3219 - 3237
  • [6] Assessing and Improving Early Social Engagement in Infants
    Koegel, Lynn Kern
    Singh, Anjileen K.
    Koegel, Robert L.
    Hollingsworth, Jessica R.
    Bradshaw, Jessica
    JOURNAL OF POSITIVE BEHAVIOR INTERVENTIONS, 2014, 16 (02) : 69 - 80
  • [7] Infants prefer a trustworthy person: An early sign of social cognition in infants
    Sakuta, Yuiko
    Kanazawa, So
    Yamaguchi, Masami K.
    PLOS ONE, 2018, 13 (09):
  • [8] Experience with intramuscular glucagon for infants with early neonatal hypoglycemia
    Smolkin, Tatiana
    Makhoul, Joanne S.
    Elias, Razan
    Farah, Fadi
    Kugelman, Amir
    Dallashi, Mariam
    Makhoul, Imad R.
    JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM, 2019, 32 (09): : 1023 - 1026
  • [9] A RESEARCH PARADIGM TO INVESTIGATE THE EFFECT OF MANIPULATION ON SOCIAL-BEHAVIOR IN GROUPS
    HABER, S
    KRAEMER, H
    JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC RESEARCH, 1981, 16 (01) : 23 - 28
  • [10] THE SOCIAL HMO DEMONSTRATION - EARLY EXPERIENCE
    GREENBERG, J
    LEUTZ, W
    GREENLICK, M
    MALONE, J
    ERVIN, S
    KODNER, D
    HEALTH AFFAIRS, 1988, 7 (03) : 66 - 79