de l'Etoile Shannon K
University of Miami, Frost School of Music, P.O. Box 248165, Coral Gables, FL 33124, United States.
Infant Behav Dev. 2006 Jul;29(3):456-70. doi: 10.1016/j.infbeh.2006.03.002. Epub 2006 May 22.
Seventy, 6-9-month-old infants were videotaped during six interactions: mother sings assigned song, "stranger" sings assigned song, mother sings song of choice, mother reads book, mother plays with toy, and mother and infant listen to recorded music. Infant-directed (ID) singing conditions elicited moderately positive cognitive behavior, low levels of positive physical behavior and minimal amounts of vocal behaviors, mostly negative. Across all conditions, cognitive scores remained positive at low to moderate levels. Physical responses were most positive during book and toy, most negative during recorded music, and differed by gender, especially during ID singing. Vocally, infants responded positively to toy, and 8-month-old infants vocalized more than younger infants, particularly during ID singing conditions. ID singing appears just as effective as book reading or toy play in sustaining infant attention and far more effective than listening to recorded music, while interactions involving objects may provide opportunity for shared attention.
70名6至9个月大的婴儿在6种互动过程中被录像:母亲唱指定歌曲、“陌生人”唱指定歌曲、母亲唱自选歌曲、母亲读书、母亲玩玩具以及母亲和婴儿听录制音乐。针对婴儿的(ID)唱歌情境引发了适度积极的认知行为、低水平的积极身体行为以及极少的发声行为,且大多为消极行为。在所有情境中,认知分数在低至中等水平保持为积极状态。身体反应在读书和玩玩具时最为积极,在听录制音乐时最为消极,并且因性别而异,尤其是在ID唱歌期间。在发声方面,婴儿对玩玩具反应积极,8个月大的婴儿比更小的婴儿发声更多,特别是在ID唱歌情境中。ID唱歌在维持婴儿注意力方面似乎与读书或玩玩具一样有效,并且比听录制音乐有效得多,而涉及物品的互动可能提供共同注意力的机会。