Clearfield Melissa W, Bailey Lillian S, Jenne Helen K, Stanger Sarah B, Tacke Nicholas
Whitman College.
Infant Ment Health J. 2014 Jan-Feb;35(1):63-9. doi: 10.1002/imhj.21423. Epub 2013 Nov 4.
Oral and manual exploration are part of the foundation of problem solving and cognition in infancy. How these develop in an at-risk population, infants in poverty, is unknown. The current study tested exploratory behaviors longitudinally at 6, 9, and 12 months in infants from high- and low-socioeconomic (SES) families. Oral exploration consisted of passive and active mouthing and looks after active mouthing. Manual exploration consisted of frequency of fingering, rotating, and transferring the object. High-SES infants replicated the trajectory previously reported in the literature, showing a decrease in mouthing and fingering and an increase in rotating and transferring (e.g., Palmer, 1989). In contrast, low-SES infants showed no change in any of the manual exploratory behaviors over the first year, thus demonstrating reduced overall levels of exploration as well as a different developmental trajectory. Results are discussed in terms of attention, potential physiological mechanisms, and implications for later problem solving.
口腔探索和手动探索是婴儿期问题解决和认知基础的一部分。这些能力在处于风险中的人群(贫困婴儿)中如何发展尚不清楚。当前研究对来自高社会经济地位(SES)和低社会经济地位家庭的婴儿在6个月、9个月和12个月时的探索行为进行了纵向测试。口腔探索包括被动和主动咬嚼以及主动咬嚼后的注视。手动探索包括手指触摸、旋转和转移物体的频率。高社会经济地位的婴儿重复了先前文献中报道的轨迹,表现为咬嚼和手指触摸减少,旋转和转移增加(例如,帕尔默,1989年)。相比之下,低社会经济地位的婴儿在第一年中任何手动探索行为都没有变化,从而表明整体探索水平降低以及发育轨迹不同。研究结果从注意力、潜在生理机制以及对后期问题解决的影响等方面进行了讨论。