Parent-infant interaction: a growth model approach.

The aim of this study is to compare the interaction of fathers and mothers with their 10-12 months old infants (n=97; parental sensitivity and mood, and infant mood) during five structured contiguous play segments, and to examine the utility of individual growth modeling. Conventional comparison of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Malmberg, L, Stein, A, West, A, Lewis, S, Barnes, J, Leach, P, Sylva, K
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2007
_version_ 1826261648317349888
author Malmberg, L
Stein, A
West, A
Lewis, S
Barnes, J
Leach, P
Sylva, K
author_facet Malmberg, L
Stein, A
West, A
Lewis, S
Barnes, J
Leach, P
Sylva, K
author_sort Malmberg, L
collection OXFORD
description The aim of this study is to compare the interaction of fathers and mothers with their 10-12 months old infants (n=97; parental sensitivity and mood, and infant mood) during five structured contiguous play segments, and to examine the utility of individual growth modeling. Conventional comparison of means across play-segments showed that parents were equally responsive, but mothers were happier than fathers, and infants were equally happy during interaction with both parents. Sensitivity and mood were more strongly related for mothers than for fathers. Uni- and multivariate growth models revealed fine-grained patterns not seen in conventional analysis: (a) parental and infant mood decreased across play more for mothers than for fathers, (b) parental sensitivity in one play-segment predicted parental mood and infant mood in the next segment, (c) change in infants' mood was related to change in sensitivity in mothers, and to change in mood in fathers, and (d) mothers' sensitive interaction with the infant was predicted by family socio-demographic background.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T19:24:41Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:1b4d82b3-e762-4824-9a39-21b1fb848ae2
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T19:24:41Z
publishDate 2007
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:1b4d82b3-e762-4824-9a39-21b1fb848ae22022-03-26T10:59:34ZParent-infant interaction: a growth model approach.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:1b4d82b3-e762-4824-9a39-21b1fb848ae2EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2007Malmberg, LStein, AWest, ALewis, SBarnes, JLeach, PSylva, KThe aim of this study is to compare the interaction of fathers and mothers with their 10-12 months old infants (n=97; parental sensitivity and mood, and infant mood) during five structured contiguous play segments, and to examine the utility of individual growth modeling. Conventional comparison of means across play-segments showed that parents were equally responsive, but mothers were happier than fathers, and infants were equally happy during interaction with both parents. Sensitivity and mood were more strongly related for mothers than for fathers. Uni- and multivariate growth models revealed fine-grained patterns not seen in conventional analysis: (a) parental and infant mood decreased across play more for mothers than for fathers, (b) parental sensitivity in one play-segment predicted parental mood and infant mood in the next segment, (c) change in infants' mood was related to change in sensitivity in mothers, and to change in mood in fathers, and (d) mothers' sensitive interaction with the infant was predicted by family socio-demographic background.
spellingShingle Malmberg, L
Stein, A
West, A
Lewis, S
Barnes, J
Leach, P
Sylva, K
Parent-infant interaction: a growth model approach.
title Parent-infant interaction: a growth model approach.
title_full Parent-infant interaction: a growth model approach.
title_fullStr Parent-infant interaction: a growth model approach.
title_full_unstemmed Parent-infant interaction: a growth model approach.
title_short Parent-infant interaction: a growth model approach.
title_sort parent infant interaction a growth model approach
work_keys_str_mv AT malmbergl parentinfantinteractionagrowthmodelapproach
AT steina parentinfantinteractionagrowthmodelapproach
AT westa parentinfantinteractionagrowthmodelapproach
AT lewiss parentinfantinteractionagrowthmodelapproach
AT barnesj parentinfantinteractionagrowthmodelapproach
AT leachp parentinfantinteractionagrowthmodelapproach
AT sylvak parentinfantinteractionagrowthmodelapproach