Department of Psychology, Marymount University, USA.
Department of Psychology, Marymount University, USA.
Infant Behav Dev. 2023 May;71:101832. doi: 10.1016/j.infbeh.2023.101832. Epub 2023 Mar 14.
A culture learning perspective motivated the present study of the acculturation of responsiveness in mother-infant interactions. Several conceptual and analytic features of responsiveness in mother-infant social interactions were examined: Temporal contingency, mean differences in responsiveness among and within dyads, attunement of mother and infant responsiveness withing dyads, and the influence of acculturation on individual responsiveness. Methodologically, acculturation was assessed at group and individual levels in immigrant Japanese, South Korean, and South American dyads in comparison with nonmigrant dyads in their respective cultures of origin (Japan, South Korea, and South America) and their single common culture of destination (United States). In total, 408 mothers and their 5½-month-old infants were observed in the naturalistic setting of the home, and observations were coded for mothers' speech to infant, social play, and encouraging her infant to look at her, and infants' looking at mother and nondistress vocalizations. Odds ratios were then generated for mother and infant responsiveness in four types of social interactions: Mother speaks to infant and infant looks at mother (Mother Speak/Infant Attend), mother plays with infant and infant looks at mother (Mother Play/Infant Attend), mother plays with infant and infant vocalizes (Mother Play/Infant Vocalize), and mother encourages infant to look at her and infant vocalizes (Mother Encourage/Infant Vocalize). Five key findings emerged. Specifically, mother and infant responsiveness in Mother Speak/Infant Attend interactions were temporally contingent in all cultures. Mean differences in responsiveness among cultures emerged, and within dyads infants were more responsive than their mothers in Mother Speak/Infant Attend interactions. Mother and infant responsiveness in Mother Speak/Infant Attend interactions were attuned in all cultures. Responsiveness in Mother Play/Infant Vocalize interactions showed acculturation effects at the individual level. Implications of these findings for understanding the development of responsiveness in social interactions and acculturation in immigrant families are discussed.
从文化学习的角度出发,本研究旨在探讨母子互动中反应性的文化适应。本文考察了母子社会互动中反应性的几个概念和分析特征:时间连贯性、母子互动中不同和同一对子之间反应性的平均值差异、母子之间反应性的协调以及文化适应对个体反应性的影响。在方法上,本研究在移民日本、韩国和南美的母子对与他们各自的原籍文化(日本、韩国和南美)和他们单一的共同目的地文化(美国)中的非移民母子对进行了群体和个体水平的文化适应评估。总共对 408 位母亲及其 5 个半月大的婴儿在家庭的自然环境中进行了观察,观察内容包括母亲对婴儿的语言、社会游戏、鼓励婴儿看她以及婴儿看母亲和非痛苦发声的行为,并对四种社会互动中的母亲和婴儿的反应性生成了优势比:母亲对婴儿说话而婴儿看母亲(母亲说话/婴儿注意)、母亲与婴儿玩耍而婴儿看母亲(母亲玩耍/婴儿注意)、母亲与婴儿玩耍而婴儿发声(母亲玩耍/婴儿发声)以及母亲鼓励婴儿看她而婴儿发声(母亲鼓励/婴儿发声)。本研究得出了五个关键发现。具体来说,在所有文化中,母亲和婴儿在母亲说话/婴儿注意互动中的反应性都是时间连贯的。不同文化之间出现了反应性的平均值差异,在母亲说话/婴儿注意互动中,婴儿比母亲更具反应性。在所有文化中,母亲和婴儿在母亲说话/婴儿注意互动中的反应性是协调的。在母亲玩耍/婴儿发声互动中,反应性表现出了个体层面的文化适应效应。本文讨论了这些发现对理解社会互动中反应性的发展和移民家庭中文化适应的意义。