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1.
J Genet Psychol ; 166(4): 365-83, 2005 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16463604

ABSTRACT

In this study, the authors investigated the relation between early social contingency experiences and infants' competencies to detect nonsocial contingencies. In this study of 87 three-month-old infants, the authors operationalized early social contingencies as prompt, contingent maternal responses and coded microanalytically on the basis of video-recorded mother-infant interactions. The authors assessed competence to detect nonsocial contingencies by 2 methods: (a) the mobile conjugate reinforcement paradigm, which focuses on detecting contingencies between the infants' actions (kicking) and nonsocial consequences (mobile moving) and (b) the visual expectation paradigm, which focuses on detecting contingencies between 1 event (a smiley face projected on a screen) that was followed by a 2nd event (a complex picture projected on the other side of the screen). The results showed that early social contingencies are related to the competency to detect nonsocial action-consequence contingencies in the mobile conjugate reinforcement paradigm.


Subject(s)
Achievement , Child Development , Adolescent , Adult , Cognition , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Mother-Child Relations , Reinforcement, Psychology , Visual Perception
2.
Child Dev ; 75(6): 1745-60, 2004.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15566377

ABSTRACT

This study relates parenting of 3-month-old children to children's self-recognition and self-regulation at 18 to 20 months. As hypothesized, observational data revealed differences in the sociocultural orientations of the 3 cultural samples' parenting styles and in toddlers' development of self-recognition and self-regulation. Children of Cameroonian Nso farmers who experience a proximal parenting style develop self-regulation earlier, children of Greek urban middle-class families who experience a distal parenting style develop self-recognition earlier, and children of Costa Rican middle-class families who experience aspects of both distal and proximal parenting styles fall between the other 2 groups on both self-regulation and self-recognition. Results are discussed with respect to their implications for culturally informed developmental pathways.


Subject(s)
Culture , Parenting/ethnology , Parents/psychology , Recognition, Psychology , Self Concept , Self Efficacy , Analysis of Variance , Child Behavior/psychology , Child, Preschool , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Female , Humans , Infant , Interpersonal Relations , Male , Parent-Child Relations , Parenting/psychology
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