Kaplan Peter S, Sliter Jessica K, Burgess Aaron P
Department of Psychology, University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center, 80217-3365, United States.
Infant Behav Dev. 2007 Dec;30(4):535-45. doi: 10.1016/j.infbeh.2007.05.003. Epub 2007 Jun 29.
Infant-directed (ID) speech produced by fathers who varied in their number of self-reported symptoms of depressed was analyzed for differences its ability to promote infant voice-face associative learning. Infants of fathers with elevated scores on the Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II) showed significantly poorer learning than did infants of fathers with non-elevated BDI-II scores when their fathers' ID speech served as a conditioned stimulus for a face reinforcer in a conditioned-attention paradigm. Fathers with elevated BDI-II scores produced ID speech with marginally significantly lower F0 variability than fathers with non-elevated BDI-II scores. However, F0-related cues were uncorrelated with infant learning. Overall, fathers' ID speech contained significantly less F0 modulation than did mothers' ID speech. These findings show that paternal depression, like maternal depression, adversely affects infant learning in a conditioned-attention paradigm.
对自我报告的抑郁症状数量不同的父亲所产生的婴儿导向(ID)言语进行分析,以探讨其促进婴儿语音-面部联想学习能力的差异。当父亲的ID言语在条件性注意范式中作为面部强化物的条件刺激时,在贝克抑郁量表第二版(BDI-II)上得分较高的父亲的婴儿,其学习能力明显比BDI-II得分不高的父亲的婴儿差。BDI-II得分较高的父亲所产生的ID言语,其基频(F0)变化幅度略低于BDI-II得分不高的父亲。然而,与F0相关的线索与婴儿学习无关。总体而言,父亲的ID言语比母亲的ID言语包含的F0调制明显更少。这些发现表明,与母亲抑郁一样,父亲抑郁在条件性注意范式中对婴儿学习有不利影响。