Nomikou Iris, Leonardi Giuseppe, Radkowska Alicja, Rączaszek-Leonardi Joanna, Rohlfing Katharina J
Psychology Department, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, United Kingdom.
Department of German Studies and Comparative Literature Studies, Paderborn University, Paderborn, Germany.
Front Psychol. 2017 Oct 10;8:1656. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01656. eCollection 2017.
Dynamical systems approaches to social coordination underscore how participants' local actions give rise to and maintain global interactive patterns and how, in turn, they are also shaped by them. Developmental research can deliver important insights into both processes: (1) the stabilization of ways of interacting, and (2) the gradual shaping of the agentivity of the individuals. In this article we propose that infants' agentivity develops out of participation, i.e., acting a part in an interaction system. To investigate this development this article focuses on the ways in which participation in routinized episodes may shape infant's agentivity in social events. In contrast to existing research addressing more advanced forms of participating in social routines, our goal was to assess infants' early participation as evidence of infants' agentivity. In our study, 19 Polish mother-infant dyads were filmed playing peekaboo when the infants were 4 and 6 months of age. We operationalized infants' participation in the peekaboo in terms of their use of various behaviors across modalities during specific phases of the game: We included smiles, vocalizations, and attempts to cover and uncover themselves or their mothers. We hypothesized that infants and mothers would participate actively in the routine by regulating their behavior so as to adhere to the routine format. Furthermore, we hypothesized that infants who experienced more scaffolding would be able to adopt a more active role in the routine. We operationalized scaffolding as mothers' use of specific peekaboo structures that allowed infants to anticipate when it was their turn to act. Results suggested that infants as young as 4 months of age engaged in peekaboo and took up turns in the game, and that their participation increased at 6 months of age. Crucially, our results suggest that infants' behavior was organized by the global structure of the peekaboo game, because smiles, vocalizations, and attempts to uncover occurred significantly more often during specific phases rather than being evenly distributed across the whole interaction. Furthermore, the way mothers structured the game at 4 months predicted infant participation at both 4 and 6 months of age.
社会协调的动力系统方法强调参与者的局部行动如何产生并维持全局互动模式,以及反过来这些模式又如何塑造参与者的行动。发展研究可以为这两个过程提供重要见解:(1)互动方式的稳定,以及(2)个体能动性的逐渐形成。在本文中,我们提出婴儿的能动性源于参与,即在互动系统中扮演角色。为了研究这种发展,本文重点关注参与常规活动如何塑造婴儿在社交事件中的能动性。与现有研究关注参与社交常规活动的更高级形式不同,我们的目标是评估婴儿早期的参与情况,以此作为婴儿能动性的证据。在我们的研究中,19对波兰母婴在婴儿4个月和6个月大时被拍摄玩躲猫猫的过程。我们根据婴儿在游戏特定阶段使用的各种跨模态行为来衡量他们对躲猫猫的参与:包括微笑、发声,以及试图遮住或露出自己或母亲。我们假设婴儿和母亲会通过调节自己的行为来积极参与常规活动,以遵循常规模式。此外,我们假设得到更多支架式教学的婴儿能够在常规活动中发挥更积极的作用。我们将支架式教学定义为母亲使用特定的躲猫猫结构,使婴儿能够预测轮到自己行动的时间。结果表明,4个月大的婴儿就参与了躲猫猫并在游戏中轮流,且他们的参与度在6个月大时有所增加。至关重要的是,我们的结果表明婴儿的行为是由躲猫猫游戏的全局结构组织的,因为微笑、发声以及露出的尝试在特定阶段出现的频率明显更高,而不是均匀分布在整个互动过程中。此外,母亲在4个月时构建游戏的方式能够预测婴儿在4个月和6个月大时的参与情况。