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Human life L2: Infancy (birth to 4)
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The human baby(infant) is born with a vast array of information and knowledge
systems already in place. As discussed, the sounds and experiences of
the external environment, as well as the emotional context passed
directly by the mother establish the very foundation of our means of learning (emotional
templates). But what then of the experience and differences of
life once we are born? Why do some infants excel, while others do not? Why are
the earliest and simplest of experiences during infancy fundamental to the
shape of our awareness? We seek to answer some of these questions in this
section.
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The human lifecycle segment
L2 is defined as the period of life from birth to around our second birthday.
This lifecycle segment is called INFANCY. This period is consistent with the
extensive studies by French behavioral scientists and pioneer Piaget who
identified this periods as the first phase of mental development as the
"sensorimotor stage". |
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| 18.13.1 |
Birth: We officially exist! |
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The average newborn infant
weighs 3.4 kilograms (7.5 pounds) and is about 51 centimetres long; in general,
boys are slightly larger and heavier than girls. (The period of the newborn
covers the first five to seven days, which the infant normally spends
recovering from the stresses of delivery.)
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During their first month, infants sleep
for about 16-18 hours a day, with five or six sleep periods alternating with a
like number of shorter episodes of wakefulness. The total amount of time spent
sleeping decreases dramatically, however, to 9-12 hours a day by age two years,
and, with the cessation of nocturnal feedings and morning and afternoon naps,
sleep becomes concentrated in one long nocturnal period.
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Newborns spend as much time in active
sleep (during which rapid eye movements occur) as in quiet sleep, but by the
third month they spend twice as much time in quiet as in active sleep, and this
trend continues (at a much slower rate) into adulthood.
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At birth the infant displays a set of
inherited reflexes, some of which serve their very survival. An infant only two
hours old typically will follow a moving light with his eyes and will blink or
close them at the sudden appearance of a bright light or at a sharp, sudden
sound nearby. The newborn infant will suck a nipple or almost any other object
(e.g., a finger) inserted into his mouth or touching his lips. They will also
turn their head toward a touch on the corner of his mouth or on the cheek; this
reflex helps him contact the nipple so they can nurse.
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An infant will grasp a finger or other
object that is placed in their palm. Reflexes that involve sucking and turning
toward stimuli are intended to maintain sustenance, while those involving
eye-closing or muscle withdrawal are intended to ward off danger. Some reflexes
involving the limbs or digits vanish after four months of age; one example is
the Babinski reflex, in which the infant bends their big toe upward and spreads
his small toes when the outer edge of the sole of his foot is stroked.
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The newborn baby can turn their head and
eyes toward and away from visual and auditory stimuli, signaling interest and
alarm, respectively. Smiling during infancy changes its meaning over the first
year. The smiles that newborns display during their first weeks constitute what
is called reflex smiling and usually occur without reference to any external
source or stimulus, including other people. By two months, however, infants
smile most readily in response to the sound of human voices, and by the third
or fourth month they smile easily at the sight of a human face, especially one
talking to or smiling at the infant. This social smiling, as it is called,
marks the beginning of the infant's emotional responses to other people.
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| 18.13.2 |
Perception |
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Research shows the
achievement of extraordinary perceptual sophistication over the first months of
life. Judging from their facial expressions when different substances are
placed on their tongues, newborn infants apparently discriminate between
bitter, salty, or sweet tastes; they have an innate preference for sweet tastes
and even prefer a sucrose solution to milk. Newborns can also discriminate
between different odours or smells; six-day-old infants can tell the smell of
their mother's breast from that of another mother.
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Much more is known, however, about infants' ability to see and hear than about
their senses of touch, smell, or taste. During the first half-year of life
outside the womb, there is rapid development of visual acuity, from 20/800
vision (in Snellen notation) among two-week-olds to 20/70 vision in
five-month-olds to 20/20 vision at five years. Even newborn infants are
sensitive to visual stimulation and attend selectively to certain visual
patterns; they will track moving stimuli with their gaze and can discriminate
among lights that vary in brightness.
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They show a noticeable predilection for
the sight of the human face, and by the first or second month they are able to
discriminate between different faces by attending to the internal
features--eyes, nose, and mouth. By the third month, infants can identify their
mothers by sight and can discriminate between some facial expressions. By the
seventh month, they can recognize a particular person from different
perspectives--for example, a full face versus a profile of that face. Infants
can identify the same facial expression on the faces of different people and
can distinguish male from female faces.
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Newborns can also hear and are sensitive to the
location of a sound source as well as to differences in the frequency of the
sound wave. They also discriminate between louder and softer sounds, as
indicated by the startle reflex and by rises in heart rate. Newborns can also
discriminate among sounds of higher or lower pitch. Continuous rather than
intermittent sounds and low tones rather than high-pitched ones are apparently
those most soothing to infants. (See hearing.)
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Even young infants show a striking sensitivity to the
tones, rhythmic flow, and individual sounds that together make up human speech.
A young infant can make subtle discriminations among phonemes, which are the
basic sounds of language, and is able to tell the difference between "pa,"
"ga," and "ba." Furthermore, infants less than one year old can make
discriminations between phonemes that some adults cannot because the particular
discrimination is not present in the adult language. A distinction between "ra"
and "la" does not exist in the Japanese language, and hence Japanese adults
fail to make that discrimination. Japanese infants under nine months can
discriminate between these two phonemes but lose that ability after one year
because the language they hear does not require that discrimination.
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| 18.13.3 |
Determinants of attention |
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Both movement and contrasts between dark and light
tend to attract an infant's attention. When an alert newborn is placed in a
dark room, they opens their eyes and looks around for edges. If the infant is
shown a thick black bar on a white background, their eyes dart to the bar's
contour and hover near it, rather than wander randomly across the visual field.
Certain other visual qualities engage the infant's attention more effectively
than do others. The colour red is more attractive than others, for example, and
objects characterized by curvilinear and symmetry hold the infant's
attention longer than do ones with straight lines and asymmetric patterns.
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Sounds having the pitch and timbre of the human voice
are more attractive than most others; the newborn is particularly responsive to
the tones of a mother's voice, as well as to sounds with a great deal of
variety. These classes of stimuli tend to elicit the most prolonged attention
during the first 8 to 10 weeks of life. During the infant's third month a
second principle, called the discrepancy principle, begins to assume
precedence. According to this principle, the infant is most likely to attend to
those events that are moderately different from those they have been exposed
to in the past. For instance, by the third month, the infant has developed an
internal representation of the faces of the people who care for them. Hence, a
slightly distorted face--e.g., a mask with the eyes misplaced--will provoke
more sustained attention than will a normal face or an object the infant has
never seen before. This discrepancy principle operates in other sensory
modalities as well.
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| 18.13.4 |
Judgment |
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Even infants less than one year old are capable of
what appears to be complex perceptual judgments. They can estimate the distance
of an object from their body, for example. If an infant is shown a rattle and
hears its distinctive sound and the room is then darkened, the infant will
reach for the rattle if the sound indicates that the object can be grasped but
will not reach if the sound indicates that it is beyond his grasp.
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More dramatically, infants will also reach for an object with a posture
appropriate to its shape. If an infant sees a round object in the shape of a
wheel and hears its distinctive sound and also sees a smaller rattle and hears
its sound, he will reach in the dark with one hand in a grasping movement if he
hears the sound of the rattle but will reach with both hands spread apart if he
hears the sound associated with the wheel.
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The four-month-old infant is also capable of rapidly learning to anticipate
where a particular event will occur. After less than a minute of exposure to
different scenes that alternate on the right and left side of their visual
field, infants will anticipate that a picture is about to appear on the right
side and will move their eyes to the right before the picture actually appears.
Similarly, infants only five to six months old can detect the relation between
the shape of a person's mouth and the sound that is uttered. Thus, they will
look longer at a face that matches the sound they are hearing than at one where
there is a mismatch between the mouth's movements and the sound being uttered.
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Infants develop an avoidance reaction to the appearance of depth by the age of
8 to 10 months, when they begin to crawl. This discovery was made on the
surface of an apparatus called the visual cliff. The latter is a table divided
into two halves, with its entire top covered by glass. One half of the top has
a checkerboard pattern lying immediately underneath the glass; the other half
is transparent and reveals a sharp drop of a metre or so, at the bottom of
which is the same checkerboard pattern. The infant is placed on a board on the
centre of the table. The mother stands across the table and tries to tempt her
baby to cross the glass on either the shallow or the deep side. Infants younger
than seven months will unhesitatingly crawl to the mother across the deep side,
but infants older than eight months avoid the deep side and refuse to cross it.
The crying and anxiety that eight-month-olds display when confronted with the
need to cross the deep side are the result of their ability to perceive depth
but also, and more importantly, their ability to recognize the discrepancy of
sitting on a solid surface while nevertheless seeing the visual bottom some
distance below. Both nervous-system maturation and experience contribute to
this particular cognitive advance.
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Finally, infants create perceptual categories by which to organize experience,
a category being defined as a representation of the dimensions or qualities
shared by a set of similar but not identical events. Infants will treat the
different colours of the spectrum, for example, according to the same
categories that adults recognize. Thus, they show greater attentiveness when a
shade of red changes to yellow than when a light shade of red merely replaces a
darker shade of the same colour. Five-month-old infants can tell the difference
between the moving pattern of lights that corresponds to a person walking and a
randomly moving version of the same number of lights, suggesting that they have
acquired a category for the appearance of a person walking. By one year of age,
infants apparently possess categories for people, edible food, household
furniture, and animals. Finally, infants seem to show the capacity for
cross-modal perception--i.e., they can recognize an object in one sensory
modality that they have previously perceived only in another. For example, if
an infant sucks a nubby pacifier without being able to see it and then is shown
that pacifier alongside a smooth one, the infant's longer look at the nubby
pacifier suggests that he recognizes it, even though he previously experienced
only its tactile qualities.
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| 18.13.5 |
Memory |
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Infants make robust advances in both recognition
memory and recall memory during their first year. In recognition memory, the
infant is able to recognize a particular object he has seen a short time
earlier (and hence will look at a new object rather than the older one if both
are present side by side). Although newborns cannot remember objects seen more
than a minute or two previously, their memory improves fairly rapidly over the
first four or five months of life. By one month they are capable of remembering
an object they saw 24 hours earlier, and by one year they can recognize an
object they saw several days earlier. Three-month-old infants can remember an
instrumental response, such as kicking the foot to produce a swinging motion in
a toy, that they learned two weeks earlier, but they respond more readily if
their memory is strengthened by repeated performances of the action.
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By contrast, recall memory involves remembering
(retrieving the representation, or mental image) an event or object that is not
currently present. A major advance in recall memory occurs between the 8th and
12th months and underlies the child's acquisition of what Piaget called "the
idea of the permanent object." This advance becomes apparent when an infant
watches an adult hide an object under a cloth and must wait a short period of
time before being allowed to reach for it. A six-month-old will not reach under
the cloth for the hidden object, presumably because he has forgotten that the
object was placed there. A one-year-old, however, will reach for the object
even after a 30-second delay period, presumably because he is able to remember
its being hidden in the first place. These improvements in recall memory arise
from the maturation of circuits linking various parts of the brain together.
The improvements enable the infant to relate an event in his environment to a
similar event in the past. As a result, he begins to anticipate his mother's
positive reaction when the two are in close face-to-face interaction, and he
behaves as if inviting her to respond. The infant may also develop new fears,
such as those of objects, people, or situations with which he is
unfamiliar--i.e., which he cannot relate to past experiences using recall
memory.
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| 18.13.6 |
Piaget theory of sensorimotor stage (0 to 2 yrs) |
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Piaget identified the first phase of mental
development as the sensorimotor stage (birth to two years). This stage is
marked by the child's acquisition of various sensorimotor schemes, which may be
defined as mental representations of motor actions that are used to obtain a
goal; such actions include sucking, grasping, banging, kicking, and throwing.
The sensorimotor stage, in turn, was differentiated by Piaget into six
sub phases, the first four of which are achieved during the initial year. During
the first sub phase, which lasts one month, the newborn's automatic reflexes
become more efficient. In the second sub phase, the infant's reflex movements
become more coordinated, though they still consist largely of simple acts
(called primary circular actions) that are repeated for their own sake (e.g.,
sucking, opening and closing the fists, and fingering a blanket) and do not
reflect any conscious intent or purpose on the infant's part. During the third
phase, lasting from the 4th to the 8th month, the infant begins to repeat
actions that produce interesting effects; for example, he may kick his legs to
produce a swinging motion in a toy. In the fourth sub phase, from the 8th to the
12th month, the child begins coordinating his actions to attain an external
goal; he thus begins solving simple problems, building on actions he has
mastered previously. For example, he may purposely knock down a pillow to
obtain a toy hidden behind it. During the fifth sub phase, covering the 12th to
18th months, the child begins to invent new sensorimotor schemes in a form of
trial-and-error experimentation. He may change his actions toward the same
object or try out new ones to achieve a particular goal. For example, if he
finds that his arm alone is not long enough, he may use a stick to retrieve a
ball that rolled beneath a couch. In the final sub phase of infancy, which is
achieved by about the 18th month, the child starts trying to solve problems by
mentally imagining certain events and outcomes rather than by simple physical
trial-and-error experimentation.
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The child's actions thus far have shown progressively
greater intentionally, and he has developed a primitive form of
representation, which Piaget defined as a kind of mental imagery that can be
used to solve a problem or attain a goal for which the child has no habitual,
available action. An important part of the child's progress in his first year
is his acquisition of what Piaget calls the idea of "object permanence"--i.e.,
the ability to treat objects as permanent entities. According to Piaget, the
infant gradually learns that objects continue to exist even when they are no
longer in view. Children younger than six months do not behave as if objects
that are moved out of sight continue to exist; they may grab for objects they
see but lose all interest once the objects are withdrawn from sight. However,
infants of nine months or older do reach for objects hidden from view if they
have watched them being hidden. Children aged 12 to 18 months may even search
for objects that they have not themselves witnessed being hidden, indicating
that they are capable of inferring those objects' location. Show such a child a
toy placed in a box, put both under a cover, and then remove the box; the child
will search under the cover as though he inferred the location of the toy.
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| 18.13.7 |
Vocalizations |
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The first of the two basic sounds made by infants
includes all those related to crying; these are present even at birth. A second
category, described as cooing, emerges at about eight weeks and includes sounds
that progress to babbling and ultimately become part of meaningful speech.
Almost all children make babbling sounds during infancy, and no relationship
has been established between the amount of babbling during the first six months
and the amount or quality of speech produced by a child at age two.
Vocalization in the young infant often accompanies motor activity and usually
occurs when the child appears excited by something he sees or hears.
Environmental influences ordinarily do not begin to influence vocalization
seriously before two months of age; in fact, during the first two months of
postnatal life, the vocalizations of deaf children born to deaf-mute parents
are indistinguishable from those of infants born to hearing parents.
Environmental effects on the variety and frequency of the infant's sounds
become more evident after roughly eight weeks of age. The use of meaningful
words differs from simple babbling in that speech primarily helps to obtain
goals, rather than simply reflecting excitement.
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| 18.13.8 |
Physical growth and development |
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A child's first year is characterized by rapid growth
of body and brain: healthy, well-nourished children experience an almost 200
percent increase in height between birth and one year. Every normal, healthy
infant proceeds through a sequence of motor development that occurs
spontaneously and requires no special training. The infant can reach for and
grasp an object by about the 4th month and can grasp a small object between his
thumb and forefinger by the 10th month. By 4 months of age most babies are able
to sit up for a minute or so with support, and by 9 months they can do so
without support for 10 minutes or more. Most babies begin crawling (i.e.,
moving with one's abdomen in contact with the floor) between 7 and 10 months
and are creeping on hands and knees adequately at the end of that time. By 10
months an infant can pull himself up to a standing position by holding onto an
external support (e.g., a piece of furniture), and by 12 months he can stand up
alone. He is able to walk with help by 12 months and can walk unaided by 14
months. By 18 months, with exposure to stairs, the average child can walk up
and down them without help, and by his second birthday he can run, walk
backward, and pick up an object from the floor without falling down. (See
physiology, psychomotor learning.)
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| 18.13.9 |
Emotional development |
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Emotions are distinct feelings or qualities of
consciousness, such as joy or sadness, that reflect the personal significance
of emotion-arousing events. The major types of emotions include fear, sadness,
anger, surprise, excitement, guilt, shame, disgust, interest, and happiness.
These emotions develop in an orderly sequence over the course of infancy and
childhood.
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Even during the first three or four months of life,
infants display behavioral reactions suggestive of emotional states. These
reactions are indicated by changes in facial expression, motor activity, and
heart rate and of course by smiling and crying. Infants show a quieting of
motor activity and a decrease in heart rate in response to an unexpected event,
a combination that implies the emotion of surprise. A second behavioral
profile, expressed by increased movement, closing of the eyes, an increase in
heart rate, and crying, usually arises in response to hunger or discomfort and
is a distress response to physical privation. A third set of reactions includes
decreased muscle tone and closing of the eyes after feeding, which may be
termed relaxation. A fourth pattern, characterized by increased movement of the
arms and legs, smiling, and excited babbling, occurs in response to moderately
familiar events or social interaction and may be termed excitement. In the
period from 4 to 10 months, new emotional states appear. The crying and
resistance infants display at the withdrawal of a favorite toy or at the
interruption of an interesting activity can be termed anger. One-year-old
infants are capable of displaying sadness in response to the prolonged absence
of a parent.
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Finally, infants begin displaying signs of the emotion
of fear by their fourth to sixth month; a fearful response to novelty--i.e., to
events that are moderately discrepant from the infant's knowledge--can be
observed as early as four months. If an infant at that age hears a voice
speaking sentences but there is no face present, he may show a fearful facial
expression and begin to cry. By 7 to 10 months of age, an infant may cry when
approached by an unfamiliar person, a phenomenon called stranger anxiety. A
month or two later the infant may cry when his mother leaves him in an
unfamiliar place; this phenomenon is called separation anxiety. It is no
accident that both stranger and separation anxiety first appear about the time
the child becomes able to recall past events. If an infant is unable to
remember that his mother had been present after she leaves the room, he will
experience no feeling of unfamiliarity when she is gone. However, if he is able
to recall the mother's prior presence and cannot understand why she is no
longer with him, that discrepancy can lead to anxiety. Thus, the appearance of
stranger and separation anxiety are dependent on the improvement in memorial
ability.
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These emotions in young infants may not be identical
to similar emotional states that occur in older children or adolescents, who
experience complex cognition in concert with emotion; these are missing in the
young infant. The older child's anger, for example, can remain strong for a
longer period of time because the child can think about the target of his
anger. Thus, it may be an error to attribute to the young infant the same
emotional states that one can assume are present in older children.
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| 18.13.10 |
Attachment |
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Perhaps the central accomplishment in personality
development during the first years of life is the establishment of specific and
enduring emotional bonds, or attachment. The person to whom an infant becomes
emotionally attached is termed the target of attachment. Targets of attachment
are usually those persons who respond most consistently, predictably, and
appropriately to the baby's signals, primarily the mother but also the father
and eventually others. Infants are biologically predisposed to form attachments
with adults, and these attachments in turn form the basis for healthy emotional
and social development throughout childhood. Infants depend on their targets of
attachment not only for food, water, warmth, and relief from pain or discomfort
but also for such emotional qualities as soothing and placating, play,
consolation, and information about the world around them. Moreover, it is
through the reciprocal interactions between child and parent that infants learn
that their behaviour can affect the behaviour of others in consistent and
predictable ways and that others can be counted on to respond when signaled.
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Infants who do not have a particular adult devoted to
their care often do not become strongly attached to any one adult and are less
socially responsive--less likely to smile, vocalize, laugh, or approach adults.
Such behaviour has been observed in children raised in relatively impersonal
institutional surroundings and is shared by monkeys reared in isolation.
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The social smiling of two-month-old infants invites
adults to interact with them; all normal human infants show a social smile,
which is, in fact, their first true sign of social responsiveness. The social
smile is apparently innate in the human species. At about six months of age
infants begin to respond socially to particular people who become the targets
of attachment. Although all infants develop some form of attachment to their
caregivers, the strength and quality of that attachment depends partly on the
parents' behaviour to the child. The sheer amount of time spent with a child
counts for less than the quality of the adult-child interaction in this regard.
The parents' satisfaction of the infant's physical needs is an important factor
in their interaction, but sensitivity to the child's needs and wishes, along
with the provision of emotional warmth, supportiveness, and gentleness are
equally important. Interestingly, mothers and fathers have been observed to
behave differently with their infants and young children: mothers hold,
comfort, and calm their babies in predictable and rhythmic ways, whereas
fathers play and excite in unpredictable and less rhythmic ways. ra |
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One significant difference has been detected in the
quality of infants' attachment to their caregivers--that between infants who
are "securely" attached and those who are "insecurely" attached. Infants with a
secure attachment to a parent are less afraid of challenge and unfamiliarity
than are those with an insecure attachment. ra |
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During the first two years of life, the presence of
targets of attachment tends to mute infants' feelings of fear in unfamiliar
situations. A one-year-old in an unfamiliar room is much less likely to cry if
his mother is present than if she is not. A one-year-old is also much less
likely to cry at an unexpected sound or an unfamiliar object if his mother is
nearby. Monkeys, too, show less fear of the unfamiliar when they are with their
mothers. This behavioral fact has been used to develop a series of experimental
situations thought to be useful in distinguishing securely from insecurely
attached infants. These procedures consist of exposing a one-year-old to what
is known as the "strange situation." Two episodes that are part of a longer
series in this procedure involve leaving the infant with a stranger and leaving
the infant alone in an unfamiliar room. Children who show only moderate
distress when the mother leaves, seek her upon her return, and are easily
comforted by her are assumed to be securely attached. Children who do not
become upset when the mother leaves, play contentedly while she is gone, and
seem to ignore her when she returns are termed insecurely attached-avoidant.
Finally, children who become extremely upset when the mother leaves, resist her
soothing when she returns, and are difficult to calm down are termed insecurely
attached-resistant. About 65 percent of all American children tested are
classed as securely attached, 21 percent as insecurely attached-avoidant, and
14 percent as insecurely attached-resistant. All other things being equal, it
is believed that those children who demonstrate a secure attachment during the
first two years of life are likely to remain more emotionally secure and be
more socially outgoing later in childhood than those who are insecurely
attached. But insecurely attached-resistant children are more likely to display
social or emotional problems later in childhood. The development of a secure or
insecure attachment is partly a function of the predictability and emotional
sensitivity of an infant's caregiver and partly the product of the infant's
innate temperament. ra |
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| 18.13.11 |
Temperament |
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Individual infants tend to vary in their basic mood
and in their typical responses to situations and events involving challenge,
restraint, and unfamiliarity. Infants may differ in such qualities as
fearfulness, irritability, fussiness, attention span, sensitivity to stimuli,
vigour of response, activity level, and readiness to adapt to new events. These
constitutional differences help make up what is called a child's temperament.
It is believed that many temperament qualities are mediated by inherited
differences in the neurochemistry of the brain. |
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Most individual differences in temperament observed in
infants up to 12 months in age do not endure over time and are not predictive
of later behaviour. One temperamental trait that is more lasting, however, is
that of inhibition to the unfamiliar. Inhibited children, who account for 10-20
percent of all one-year-old children, tend to be shy, timid, and restrained
when encountering unfamiliar people, objects, or situations. As young infants,
they show high levels of motor activity and fretfulness in response to
stimulation. (They are also likely to be classified as insecurely
attached-resistant when observed in the "strange situation.") By contrast,
uninhibited children, who account for about 30 percent of all children, tend to
be very sociable, fearless, and emotionally spontaneous in unfamiliar
situations. As infants, they display low levels of motor activity and
irritability in response to unfamiliar stimuli. Inhibited children have a more
reactive sympathetic nervous system than do uninhibited children. Inhibited
children show larger increases in heart rate in response to challenges and
larger increases in diastolic blood pressure when they change from a sitting to
a standing posture. In addition, inhibited children show greater activation of
the frontal cortex on the right side of the brain, while uninhibited children
show greater activation of the frontal cortex on the left side.
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These two temperament profiles are moderately stable
from the second to the eighth year; studies reveal that about one-half of those
children classed as inhibited at age two are still shy, introverted, and
emotionally restrained at age eight, while about three-quarters of those
children classed as uninhibited have remained outgoing, sociable, and
emotionally spontaneous.
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