Yale Child Study Center, Yale School of Medicine, University of Leuven, Northern Illinois University, Belgium.
Infant Behav Dev. 2013 Dec;36(4):635-41. doi: 10.1016/j.infbeh.2013.06.008. Epub 2013 Jul 30.
Parental reflective functioning represents the capacity of a parent to think about their own and their child's mental states and how these mental states may influence behavior. Here we examined whether this capacity as measured by the Parental Reflective Functioning Questionnaire relates to tolerance of infant distress by asking mothers (N = 21) to soothe a life-like baby simulator (BSIM) that was inconsolable, crying for a fixed time period unless the mother chose to stop the interaction. Increasing maternal interest and curiosity in their child's mental states, a key feature of parental reflective functioning, was associated with longer persistence times with the BSIM. Importantly, on a non-parent distress tolerance task, parental reflective functioning was not related to persistence times. These findings suggest that parental reflective functioning may be related to tolerance of infant distress, but not distress tolerance more generally, and thus may reflect specificity to persistence behaviors in parenting contexts.
父母的反思功能代表了父母思考自己和孩子的心理状态以及这些心理状态如何影响行为的能力。在这里,我们通过要求母亲(N=21)安抚一个逼真的婴儿模拟器(BSIM)来检查这种能力,当婴儿模拟器(BSIM)持续哭泣固定时间而无法安抚时,母亲可以选择停止互动。 母亲对孩子心理状态的兴趣和好奇心增加,这是父母反思功能的一个关键特征,与 BSIM 的持续时间呈正相关。重要的是,在非父母的痛苦容忍度任务中,父母的反思功能与持续时间无关。这些发现表明,父母的反思功能可能与婴儿痛苦的容忍度有关,但不是更普遍的痛苦容忍度,因此可能反映了在育儿环境中坚持行为的特异性。