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SOCIOEMOTIONAL%20DEVELOPMENT%20IN%20INFANCY

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Title: SOCIOEMOTIONAL%20DEVELOPMENT%20IN%20INFANCY


1
CHAPTER 8
  • SOCIOEMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN INFANCY

2
EMOTIONAL AND PEROSONALITY DEVELOPMENT
3
Emotional Development
  • Defining emotion Feeling or affect that can
    involve physiological arousal, conscious
    experience, and behavioral expression.
  • Affect in parent-child relationships Emotions
    are the first language between parents and
    infant infants react to their parents facial
    expressions and tone of voice initial aspects of
    infant attachment to parents are based on
    interchanges a mothers facial expression
    influences whether an infant will explore an
    unfamiliar environment.
  • Developmental timetable of emotions The
    Maximally Discriminative Facial Movement Coding
    System (MAX) (Carroll Izard) codes infants
    facial expressions related to emotion. MAX tells
    us that interest, distress, and disgust are
    present at birth and the following reactions
    appear at later junctions continued

4
  • Social smile appears at four to six weeks.
  • Sadness appears at about three to four months.
  • Fear appears at about five to seven months.
  • Shyness appears at about six to eight months.
  • Contempt and guilt appear at around two years of
    age.
  • Crying is the most important mechanism newborns
    have fro communicating. There are at least three
    types
  • Basic cry rhythmic pattern cry followed by
    silence
  • Anger cry variation of the basic cry with more
    excess air forced through vocal chords
  • Pain cry sudden loud crying without preliminary
    noises followed by an extended period of breath
    suspension

5
  • Fear There are two related fears for infants
  • Stranger anxiety Infant shows a fear and
    wariness of strangers, usually second half of
    first year. By age nine months, it becomes more
    intense.
  • Separation anxiety Fear and distress of being
    left by the caregiver, who will protect them from
    harm.
  • Social referencing The infant reading emotional
    cues from others to assist in how to act in a
    given situation.
  • Emotional regulation Managing arousal to adapt
    and reach a goal.

6
  • Adaptive Functions
  • Control of arousal Safeguards against
    uncomfortably high levels of excitement or
    distress.
  • Establishment and maintenance of social
    relationships Infants learn to manage their
    emotions by distracting themselves.
  • Provision of state this is conducive for learning
    Learning occurs best when individuals are not
    overly aroused.
  • Contextual functions Infants are affected by
    fatigue, hunger, and time of day and eventually
    learn to adapt to different contexts that require
    emotional regulation.
  • Coping strategies Infants learn how to regulate
    through coping strategies such as sucking on a
    thumb.

7
Temperament an individuals behavior style and
ways of emotionally responding to stimuli.
  • Defining and classifying temperament There may
    be dimensions of temperament
  • Chess and Thomas Temperament Styles
  • Easy child positive mood, quickly establishes
    regular routines in infancy, and adapts easily to
    new experience
  • Difficult child negatively reacts and cries
    frequently, irregular daily routines, and is slow
    to accept new experiences
  • Slow-to-warm-up child low activity level,
    somewhat negative, low adaptability, and low
    intensity of mood
  • Shy and inhibited children inhibited children
    tent to react to unfamiliarity with initial
    avoidance, distress, or subdued affect.

8
  • New Classifications
  • Positive affect and approach the extent to
    which a child is sociable and outgoing.
  • Negative affectivity child is easily
    distressed, closely related to introversion
  • Effortful control (self-regulation) high on
    effortful control means the infant is capable of
    managing arousal, while low control has the
    opposite outcome.
  • Heredity and environment An infant is born with
    some static characteristics that are impacted by
    the environment.
  • Goodness of fit A match between the childs
    temperament and the environmental demands with
    which the child must cope.
  • Parenting and childs temperament Nature as
    well as nurture influence the childs
    development children differ from each other from
    very early in life and these differences have
    important implications for parent-child
    interactions.

9
Personality development individual
characteristics of the child
  • Trust Eriksons first stage of psychosocial
    development trust vs. mistrust if the infant
    is not well fed and kept warm on a consistent
    basis, a sense of mistrust develops.
  • The developing sense of self and independence
    sense of self is a strong motivating force
  • The self By 18 months the infant can recognize
    his or her reflection in a mirror.
  • Independence Eriksons second stage of
    psychosocial development autonomy vs. shame and
    doubt as the child explores through climbing,
    opening, closing, etc., overprotective or
    critical parenting can cause the child to develop
    an excessive sense of shame and doubt.

10
ATTACHMENTWhat Is Attachment? Restricted to a
relationship between particular social figures
and a particular phenomenon a close emotional
bonding between infant and caregiver. Work with
monkeys indicates that not food, but proximity
and comfort are key integers of secure attachment.
11
Individual Differences The work of the late
Mary Ainsworth.
  • Secure attachment Infants use the caregiver as
    a secure base from which to explore the
    environment Ainsworth believed it forms an
    important foundation for psychological
    development in later life.
  • Strange situation An observational measure of
    infant attachment that requires the infant to
    move through a series of introductions,
    separations, and reunions with caregiver. The
    following resulting definitions emanate from
    these observations
  • Insecure avoidant babies Show insecurity by
    avoiding the caregiver often display distress by
    crying when she leaves the room.
  • Insecure resistant babies Cling to caregiver
    then resist by fighting dont explore the
    playroom.
  • Disorganized babies Disoriented, strong
    patterns of avoidance and resistance child leans
    away.

12
Care-giving Styles and Attachment Classification
Securely attached babies have caregivers who
are sensitive to their signals and are
consistently available to respond to their
infants needs.
Attachment, Temperament, and the Wider Social
World Some developmentalists believe that too
much emphasis is placed on the importance of the
attachment bond researchers have found cultural
variations in attachment (i.e., German and
Japanese babies often show different patterns of
attachment from American babies).
13
SOCIAL CONTEXTSThe Family
  • The transition to parenthood When people become
    parents through pregnancy, adoption, or
    step-parenting, they face disequilibrium and must
    adapt. During the early years of the childs
    life, parents must juggle their roles as parents
    and self-actualizing adults.
  • Reciprocal socialization Children and parents
    socialize each other in infancy, mutual gaze or
    eye contact play and important role in early
    social interaction. Scaffolding is parental
    behavior that supports childrens efforts through
    positive reciprocal frameworks.
  • The Family as a system Divisions of labor among
    family members define particular subunits and
    attachments define others. Each family member is
    a participant in several subsystems.
  • Mothers and fathers as caregivers The main
    responsibility usually falls on the mother.
    Mothers do more family work than fathers, but
    observations of fathers with their infants
    suggest that fathers have the ability to act
    sensitively and responsively with their infants.

14
Day Care Approximately 2 million children are
in formal, licensed day care, and more than 5
million attend kindergarten, with untold millions
in informal, unlicensed babysitting situations.
A great deal of research has been completed on
this topic.
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