Barrera M E, Vella D M
Infant-Parent Program, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Am J Occup Ther. 1987 Mar;41(3):168-72. doi: 10.5014/ajot.41.3.168.
This study investigated social interactions between infants and mothers, comparing dyads with physically disabled infants and dyads with nondisabled infants. The groups were matched on mental and motor development, sex, socioeconomic status, birth order, and maternal education. Each infant-mother dyad was videotaped at home during a 10-minute period of free play, and blind observers subsequently transcribed infants' and mothers' behaviors. In general, the groups were remarkably similar in their interaction patterns. However, a few differences emerged: Mothers of infants with physical disabilities were significantly more commanding than were comparison mothers. Nondisabled infants tended to engage in more eye contact than did infants with physical disabilities. And whereas mothers of nondisabled infants responded to interactive play with interactive play, mothers of infants with physical handicaps tended to respond with commands and verbalizations. These results suggest reciprocal influences between infants and mothers in both groups and highlight emerging maternal behavior patterns that may interfere with the development of communication and independence in handicapped young children.
本研究调查了婴儿与母亲之间的社交互动,比较了有身体残疾婴儿的二元组和无残疾婴儿的二元组。两组在智力和运动发育、性别、社会经济地位、出生顺序和母亲教育程度方面进行了匹配。每个婴儿-母亲二元组在10分钟的自由玩耍期间在家中被录像,随后由盲测观察者记录婴儿和母亲的行为。总体而言,两组的互动模式非常相似。然而,出现了一些差异:身体残疾婴儿的母亲比对照组母亲更具指令性。无残疾婴儿比身体残疾婴儿更倾向于进行更多的眼神交流。无残疾婴儿的母亲以互动游戏回应互动游戏,而有身体残疾婴儿的母亲则倾向于以指令和言语回应。这些结果表明两组中婴儿和母亲之间存在相互影响,并突出了可能干扰残疾幼儿沟通和独立性发展的新出现的母亲行为模式。