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1.
Child Dev ; 72(3): 748-67, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11405580

ABSTRACT

This prospective longitudinal study examined the contribution of dimensions of maternal responsiveness (descriptions, play, imitations) to the timing of five milestones in children's (N = 40) early expressive language: first imitations, first words, 50 words in expressive language, combinatorial speech, and the use of language to talk about the past. Events-History Analysis, a statistical technique that estimates the extent to which predictors influence the timing of events, was used. At 9 and 13 months, maternal responsiveness and children's activities (e.g., vocalizations, play) were coded from videotaped interactions of mother-child free play; information about children's language acquisition was obtained through biweekly interviews with mothers from 9 through 21 months. Maternal responsiveness at both ages predicted the timing of children's achieving language milestones over and above children's observed behaviors. Responsiveness at 13 months was a stronger predictor of the timing of language milestones than was responsiveness at 9 months, and certain dimensions of responsiveness were more predictive than others. The multidimensional nature of maternal responsiveness and specificity in mother-child language relations are discussed.


Subject(s)
Achievement , Language Development , Maternal Behavior , Mother-Child Relations , Adult , Attention , Female , Humans , Imitative Behavior , Infant , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Play and Playthings , Prospective Studies , Sex Factors , Verbal Behavior
2.
J Exp Child Psychol ; 77(4): 304-16, 2000 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11063631

ABSTRACT

Although boys outshine girls in a range of motor skills, there are no reported gender differences in motor performance during infancy. This study examined gender bias in mothers' expectations about their infants' motor development. Mothers of 11-month-old infants estimated their babies' crawling ability, crawling attempts, and motor decisions in a novel locomotor task-crawling down steep and shallow slopes. Mothers of girls underestimated their performance and mothers of boys overestimated their performance. Mothers' gender bias had no basis in fact. When we tested the infants in the same slope task moments after mothers' provided their ratings, girls and boys showed identical levels of motor performance.


Subject(s)
Child Development , Infant Behavior , Mothers/psychology , Motor Activity , Prejudice , Adult , Female , Humans , Infant , Male
3.
Child Dev ; 71(1): 127-36, 2000.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10836566

ABSTRACT

The twentieth century has been characterized by four important social trends that have fundamentally changed the social cultural context in which children develop: women's increased labor force participation, increased absence of nonresidential fathers in the lives of their children, increased involvement of fathers in intact families, and increased cultural diversity in the U.S.. In this essay, we discuss how these trends are changing the nature of father involvement and family life, and in turn affecting children's and fathers' developmental trajectories. We end with an eye toward the twenty-first century by examining how the children of today will construct their expectations about the roles of fathers and mothers as they become the parents of tomorrow. This life-span approach to fatherhood considers the broader sociohistorical context in which fatherhood develops, and emphasizes the urgent need to consider mothers, fathers, and family structure in future research as we seek to understand and model the effects of parenting on children's development.


Subject(s)
Fathers , Parenting/trends , Child , Child Development/physiology , Child, Preschool , Culture , Family/psychology , Father-Child Relations , Humans
4.
Dev Psychol ; 34(1): 115-24, 1998 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9471009

ABSTRACT

Sixty-four mothers of children ranging in age from 6 to 58 months were asked to determine, for pairings of play and language items, which item was more advanced developmentally. This procedure was repeated within 2 weeks. In general, mothers' orderings of play and language items matched those established in the developmental literature and were stable over the short term. Mothers' knowledge about language development was stronger than and unrelated to their knowledge about play, suggesting that maternal knowledge about developmental domains is differentiated and specific. Finally, mothers' judgments about the developmental milestones depended on their children's current developmental stage: Mothers were less accurate at estimating the timing of milestones that their children had mastered many months earlier, supporting the view that mothers' knowledge is informed by their children's recent rather than past achievements in specific areas.


Subject(s)
Child Language , Cognition/physiology , Language Development , Mother-Child Relations , Mothers/psychology , Play and Playthings , Age Factors , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Time Factors
5.
J Child Lang ; 25(3): 675-700, 1998 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10095330

ABSTRACT

In a longitudinal investigation of 40 child-mother dyads, we examined prediction from three indexes of children's own language: (1) vocal imitations, (2) first spontaneous words in production, and (3) receptive language starting at 0;9, and their mothers' verbal responsiveness at 0;9 and 1;1, to the developmental onset of three significant language milestones of the second year: (1) 50 words in productive language, (2) combinatorial speech, and (3) the use of language to express a memory. In these analyses, we utilized EVENTS HISTORY ANALYSIS, a statistical technique well suited to questions concerning when in development certain events begin and the extent to which predictors influence the timing of those events. The timing of children's first words in production, the timing of their achievement of 50 words in receptive language, and maternal responsiveness at 1;1 each contributed uniquely to variation in the timing of the three language milestones. When child and mother factors were considered together, the onset of the three language milestones differed by as much as 0;5 months for children in the lower and upper 10th percentiles of the predictor variables. The present findings contribute to generating and testing specific models about child and mother factors thought to explain variation in key aspects of children's second-year language development.


Subject(s)
Child Development/physiology , Child Language , Language Development , Adult , Age Factors , Female , Humans , Infant , Language Tests , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Parent-Child Relations , Time Factors , Verbal Behavior , Verbal Learning
6.
Child Dev ; 67(4): 1752-66, 1996 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8890505

ABSTRACT

This investigation of mother and toddler play had 2 goals. The primary goal was to examine the types of play mothers introduce in direct response to their toddlers' play. A secondary and exploratory goal was to examine the relation between maternal knowledge about child play and actual maternal play behaviors. 50 mothers and their 21-month-old toddlers were observed at home during free play. Mother and child exploratory, nonsymbolic, and symbolic play were coded. Sequential analyses revealed that mothers adjusted their play to their children's play level by responding to their children with play that was either at the same level or at a higher level than their children's play. Furthermore, mothers who were more knowledgeable about early play development more often responded to their children's play by introducing higher level play. These findings suggest that mothers tend to play with their toddlers in ways that might promote their child's development, and that mothers with more knowledge about play development provide their children with appropriately challenging play interactions.


Subject(s)
Maternal Behavior , Mother-Child Relations , Play and Playthings , Female , Humans , Infant , Infant Behavior , Male , Psychology, Child
8.
Child Dev ; 63(4): 808-21, 1992 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1505242

ABSTRACT

This study examines and compares prominent characteristics of maternal responsiveness to infant activity during home-based naturalistic interactions of mother-infant dyads in New York City, Paris, and Tokyo. Both culture-general and culture-specific patterns of responsiveness emerged. For example, in all 3 locales infants behaved similarly, mothers also behaved similarly with respect to a hierarchy of response types, and mothers and infants manifest both specificity and mutual appropriateness in their interactions: Mothers responded to infants' exploration of the environment with encouragement to the environment, to infants' vocalizing nondistress with imitation, and to infants' vocalizing distress with nurturance. Differences in maternal responsiveness among cultures occurred to infant looking rather than to infant vocalizing and in mothers' emphasizing dyadic versus extradyadic loci of interaction. Universals of maternal responsiveness, potential sources of cultural variation, and implications of similarities and differences in responsiveness for child development in different cultural contexts are discussed.


Subject(s)
Cross-Cultural Comparison , Maternal Behavior , Mother-Child Relations , Personality Development , Adult , Attention , Female , France , Humans , Infant , Japan , Language Development , Social Environment , United States , Visual Perception
9.
Child Dev ; 61(4): 1206-17, 1990 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2209190

ABSTRACT

Activities of primiparous mothers and infants were observed at 2 and 5 months of age during naturalistic interactions at home. 5 prominent features of mother and infant exchanges in this short-term longitudinal study are described and discussed in the context of 3 models of unique environment-development relations: covariation, stability, continuity, correspondence, and prediction. Generally, mothers' activities did not positively covary at either age, nor did those of infants. Some maternal activities were stable in this time period; some developmentally increased, and some developmentally decreased. Infants' activities were unstable, but most increased over time. Specific mother and infant activities corresponded, and over time mothers and infants influenced one another in specific ways. In the critical period of the first half year, infants appear to be flexible and plastic in their behavioral repertoires and are influenced by their mothers; mothers are somewhat consistent, but they also adapt to the behaviors of their infants.


Subject(s)
Maternal Behavior , Mother-Child Relations , Personality Development , Psychology, Child , Arousal , Female , Humans , Infant , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Psychomotor Performance , Social Behavior , Social Environment , Verbal Behavior
10.
Child Dev ; 60(3): 738-51, 1989 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2737021

ABSTRACT

In a longitudinal study, infants' habituation and mothers' encouragement of attention were assessed at 5 months, and toddlers' language comprehension, language production, and pretense play and mothers' encouragement of attention were assessed at 13 months. Structural equation modeling was used to examine the unique contributions of infant habituation and maternal stimulation to toddlers' cognitive abilities. Habituation predicted language comprehension, pretense play, and a latent variable of language and play after the influences of both 5- and 13-month maternal encouragement of attention were partialed. Likewise, early maternal encouragement of attention explained unique variance in toddlers' language comprehension and the language-and-play latent variable after infant habituation was controlled. These findings indicate that links between early habituation and later cognitive development are direct and not solely mediated by maternal stimulation, and that maternal stimulation of young infants influences the development of children's representational competence over and above infants' own information-processing abilities.


Subject(s)
Attention , Habituation, Psychophysiologic , Imagination , Language Development , Maternal Behavior , Play and Playthings , Child Language , Female , Humans , Infant , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Mother-Child Relations , Personality Development
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