Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, Rosario, Argentina.
Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, USA.
Dev Sci. 2024 Sep;27(5):e13471. doi: 10.1111/desc.13471. Epub 2024 Jan 28.
Theories of early development have emphasized the power of caregivers as active agents in infant socialization and learning. However, there is variability, across communities, in the tendency of caregivers to engage with their infants directly. This raises the possibility that infants and children in some communities spend more time engaged in solitary activities than in dyadic or triadic interactions. Here, we focus on one such community (indigenous Wichi living in Argentina's Chaco Forest) to test this possibility. We examine naturally occurring attentional activity involving the mother and child among the Wichi and among Eurodescendant Spanish-speaking families living in Argentina. We engaged 16 families-8 Wichi and 8 Eurodescendant-in an observational study of interactions between caregivers and their 1- to 2-year-olds. A mixed-analytic approach revealed no differences between communities in the proportion of time infants spent alone, or in mother-child interaction. What does differ, however, is how mothers engage in these interactions: Wichi mothers spend a greater proportion of their time observing their infants than do Eurodescendant mothers. Moreover, when infants in both groups are alone, they focus their 'solitary' activities differently: Wichi infants engaged primarily in observation alone, whereas Eurodescendant infants were more focused on the object. Finally, all mother-child pairs engaged in dyadic and triadic (object-infant-caregiver) patterns of attention, but the triadic patterns differed considerably between cultures: Among Wichi, mothers actively "watched" infants as they engaged with objects, whereas Eurodescendant mothers actively engaged with their infants in joint attentional episodes. This work illustrates how attention and socialization, key mechanisms of early development, are culturally organized. A video abstract of this article can be viewed at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SwsOCLXubKQ. RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS: Longitudinal, observational investigation of mother-infant interaction in two distinct Argentine cultural groups (Wichi and Eurodescendants) reveals both commonalities and clear community-based differences in interactions between mothers and their 1- to 2-year-olds. Wichi mother-infant dyads engaged primarily in visual observation of one another, but their Eurodescendant counterparts tended to engage in more verbal or physical interaction. We identify a new form of triadic interaction-lateral joint attention-among the Wichi dyads. This work underscores that attention and socialization, key mechanisms of early development, are culturally organized.
早期发展理论强调了看护者作为婴儿社会化和学习的积极参与者的力量。然而,在看护者与婴儿直接互动的倾向方面,不同社区之间存在差异。这就提出了一种可能性,即某些社区的婴儿和儿童可能会花更多的时间独自参与活动,而不是进行二元或三元互动。在这里,我们关注一个这样的社区(居住在阿根廷查科森林的本土维奇人)来验证这种可能性。我们考察了维奇人和生活在阿根廷的讲西班牙语的欧洲裔家庭中母亲和孩子之间自然发生的注意力活动。我们邀请了 16 个家庭(8 个维奇家庭和 8 个欧洲裔家庭)参与了一项对照顾者与其 1 至 2 岁孩子之间互动的观察研究。混合分析方法显示,社区之间在婴儿独自度过的时间比例或母婴互动方面没有差异。然而,不同之处在于母亲如何参与这些互动:维奇母亲比欧洲裔母亲花费更多的时间观察自己的婴儿。此外,当两组婴儿都独处时,他们的“孤独”活动也不同:维奇婴儿主要独自进行观察,而欧洲裔婴儿则更专注于物体。最后,所有母婴对都参与了二元和三元(物体-婴儿-照顾者)的注意力模式,但两种文化之间的三元模式差异很大:在维奇人中,母亲在婴儿与物体互动时积极地“观察”婴儿,而欧洲裔母亲则积极地与婴儿一起参与联合注意力事件。这项工作说明了注意力和社会化这两个早期发展的关键机制是如何被文化组织起来的。本文的视频摘要可以在 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SwsOCLXubKQ 上观看。研究亮点:对两个不同的阿根廷文化群体(维奇人和欧洲裔)母婴互动的纵向、观察性研究揭示了母亲和她们 1 至 2 岁孩子之间的互动既有共同点,也有明显的基于社区的差异。维奇母婴对子主要进行彼此的视觉观察,但他们的欧洲裔对应物则倾向于进行更多的言语或身体互动。我们在维奇对子中发现了一种新的三元互动形式——横向联合注意力。这项工作强调了注意力和社会化这两个早期发展的关键机制是如何被文化组织起来的。