학술논문

Maternal Sensitivity During the First 3 1/2 Years of Life Predicts Electrophysiological Responding to and Cognitive Appraisals of Infant Crying at Midlife.
Document Type
Article
Source
Developmental Psychology; Oct2018, Vol. 54 Issue 10, p1917-1927, 11p
Subject
Child development
Cognitive testing
Crying
Emotions
Infant psychology
Longitudinal method
Parenting
Adults
Electrophysiology
Motherhood
Minnesota
Language
ISSN
00121649
Abstract
This study examined the predictive significance of maternal sensitivity in early childhood for electrophysiological responding to and cognitive appraisals of infant crying at midlife in a sample of 73 adults (age = 39 years; 43 females; 58 parents) from the Minnesota Longitudinal Study of Risk and Adaptation. When listening to an infant crying, both parents and nonparents who had experienced higher levels of maternal sensitivity in early childhood (between 3 and 42 months of age) exhibited larger changes from rest toward greater relative left (vs. right) frontal EEG activation, reflecting an approach-oriented response to distress. Parents who had experienced greater maternal sensitivity in early childhood also made fewer negative causal attributions about the infant's crying; the association between sensitivity and attributions for infant crying was nonsignificant for nonparents. The current findings demonstrate that experiencing maternal sensitivity during the first 3 1/2 years of life has long-term predictive significance for adults' processing of infant distress signals more than three decades later. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]