Bader Lauren R, Fouts Hillary N, Jaekel Julia
University of Michigan, Department of Psychology, 530 Church St. Ann Arbor, MI 48103, USA.
University of Tennessee, Department of Child and Family Studies, 1215 W. Cumberland Ave Knoxville, TN 37996, USA.
Infant Behav Dev. 2019 Feb;54:22-36. doi: 10.1016/j.infbeh.2018.09.005. Epub 2018 Dec 3.
Parents' exposure to stressful ecosocial situations, like inadequate resources, is linked to parents' perceptions of infants' fussing and crying and less sensitive caregiving. However, studies supporting these findings predominantly come from Western contexts of parenting and infant care. Ecosocial situations may have different effects on parenting and infants in distinct cultural contexts. In this study, the link between Gamo mothers' expressions of stress about their infants' negative emotional displays (N = 29 mothers and infants) and mother-infant interactions was investigated. Mothers who expressed stress in response to their infants' negative emotions demonstrated fewer interactions overall with their infants compared to mothers who did not express stress. Regression analyses showed that mothers who did not express stress had infants that fussed and cried more in their presence than infants of mothers who did not express stress, albeit insignificant. These results are discussed in the context of Gamo infancy in Southern Ethiopia.
父母暴露于诸如资源不足等压力性生态社会环境中,与父母对婴儿哭闹的认知以及缺乏敏感性的育儿方式有关。然而,支持这些发现的研究主要来自西方的育儿和婴儿护理背景。生态社会环境在不同文化背景下可能对育儿和婴儿有不同影响。在本研究中,调查了加莫族母亲(N = 29对母婴)对其婴儿负面情绪表现的压力表达与母婴互动之间的联系。与未表达压力的母亲相比,因婴儿负面情绪而表达压力的母亲与婴儿的总体互动较少。回归分析表明,未表达压力的母亲在场时,其婴儿比表达压力的母亲的婴儿哭闹更多,尽管差异不显著。这些结果在埃塞俄比亚南部加莫族婴儿期的背景下进行了讨论。