Lamb M E
Child Dev. 1978 Dec;49(4):1189-92.
24 infants and their preschool-aged siblings were observed in a laboratory playroom in the presence of their parents. Observations took place when the infants were 12 months old and again 6 months later. Analysis of the social behavior revealed that, at both ages, the children assumed differentiable roles in their interactions: The infants "followed" by observing and imitating while the preschoolers "led" by drawing the infants' attention and by assertive dominance. Over time, infants became increasingly willing to direct social behaviors toward their siblings. There was remarkable behavioral stability across time, with the infants' early propensities seemingly causally related to later pre-schoolers' behavior. Older girls directed more social behaviors to siblings than boys did. The amount of parent-directed behavior was affected by the number of adults present, whereas the amount of sibling-directed behavior was unaffected.
24名婴儿及其学龄前兄弟姐妹在有父母在场的实验室游戏室中接受观察。观察在婴儿12个月大时进行,6个月后再次进行。对社交行为的分析表明,在两个年龄段,孩子们在互动中都扮演着不同的角色:婴儿通过观察和模仿“跟随”,而学龄前儿童则通过吸引婴儿的注意力和坚定的主导地位“引领”。随着时间的推移,婴儿越来越愿意对他们的兄弟姐妹直接表现出社交行为。随着时间的推移,行为具有显著的稳定性,婴儿早期的倾向似乎与后来学龄前儿童的行为存在因果关系。年龄较大的女孩比男孩对兄弟姐妹表现出更多的社交行为。指向父母的行为量受在场成年人数量的影响,而指向兄弟姐妹的行为量则不受影响。