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Emotional Development in the Early Years

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Title: Emotional Development in the Early Years


1
Emotional Development in the Early Years
  • The Life Span
  • Human Development for Healthcare Professionals,
    Chapter 4

2
Emotions Why do we have them?
  • Survival
  • Communication
  • Cognitive influences
  • Phineas Gage matrix
  • Mental Health
  • Emotional Intelligence

3
The Basic Emotions
  • The basic emotions we are born with are fear,
    sadness, happiness, anger, and surprise.
  • Other emotions its believed we have at birth
    include distress, contentment, disgust, and
    interest.
  • How are emotions developed?
  • Izards Differential Emotions Theory emotions
    are are the direct product of the underlying
    neural processes related to each of the emotional
    expressions. (An evolution theory)
  • Sroufes Development Position emotions are not
    fully formed at birth and they develop from
    undifferentiated responses into more
    differentiated ones and finally in an integrated
    emotional repertoire. (A nurture theory)

4
Early Caregiver-Infant Interactions and Emotional
Development
  • Why do we take care of babies in the first place?
  • Releasers
  • Biologically predisposed?
  • Emotional Regulation
  • Visual Cliff experiments and mothers facial
    expressions
  • Tronick, Als, Brazeltons Stiff-face paradigm
  • Other-directed coping behaviors from baby to
    mother
  • Self-directed coping behaviors baby trying to
    cope with own feelings

5
Infants of Depressed Mothers
  • Depressed caregivers typically do not show
    positive facial expressions to their infants
  • Often leads to
  • Most self-directed coping behaviors
  • Higher levels of cortisol higher heart rates
  • May lead to
  • Greater incidences of depression in the child?

6
Attachment Early Social Relations
  • Bonding the process of a mother/father/caregiver
    s forming a relationship with the infant,
    typically in the first hours after birth.
  • Attachment the process of forming a
    relationship with a caregiver used by an infant.
  • Bonding ? Attachment!!!

7
Attachment Early Social Relations
  • Erikson stated that attachment was a direct
    response to an infant learning how to trust
    his/her caregivers.
  • Bowlby stated that attachment and bonding
    occurred to ensure the survival of the infant.
  • Separation anxiety
  • Stranger anxiety

8
Attachment Early Social Relations
  • Ainsworth found that infants form different types
    of attachments with their primary caregivers
  • Strange situation test
  • Securely attached babies show distress upon
    separation, but greet mother happily upon return
  • Anxious Ambivalent (Insecurely Attached)
    distressed upon separation, resist mother on her
    return (show anger, approaching and resisting
    mother)
  • Avoidant (Insecurely Attached) showed relatively
    low amounts of anxiety upon separation and fairly
    unresponsive upon reunion
  • Disorganized/Disoriented (Insecurely Attached)
    upon reunion, both approach and push mother away.

9
Another theory on Bonding and Attachment
  • Freud felt that babies became attached to their
    mother because she was the provider of food, and
    they did NOT attach to the father.
  • Harlow felt this was incorrect and conducted his
    famous terry-cloth mother experiments.

10
Infant Temperament
  • One of the most significant factors in attachment
    and bonding is the infants temperament, or their
    individual emotional and behavioral
    characteristics.
  • Common temperament styles include
    fearfulness/reactivity, irritability/negative
    emotionality, activity level, positive affect,
    attention-persistence, and rhythmicity (how
    predictable the infant is).

11
Infant Temperament
  • Where does temperament come from?
  • Assumed to be biological (for instance-reactivity)
  • Still mostly unstudied
  • How is it related to parental caregiving?
  • Thomas Chess (1977)
  • Four types of babies as defined by their
    temperament easy (about 40), difficult (about
    10), slow-to-warm (about 15), and undefined
    (35)
  • Followed the parents as well and found that
    parents of easy and undefined babies adapted
    easier than did parents of the other two groups.
    Perhaps it has something to do with how well the
    parents expectations were met.

12
Infant Temperament
  • Does temperament play a role in the development
    of attachment relationships?
  • The better the fit between the infant/caregiver,
    the better the childs temperament
  • Proneness to distress the warmer, more
    supportive the mother, the less likely the baby
    is prone to distress
  • Class and Culture effects on temperament

13
Variations in Attachment Relationships
  • Attachment with mothers and fathers
  • typically, babies make primary attachments to
    mother, secondary to fathers/other caregivers.
  • Attachments to fathers are typically the same as
    with the mothers, but with other secondary
    caregivers, its often qualitatively different.

14
The Importance of Early Attachments
  • Erikson and Bowlby both state that if a child has
    made secure attachments from birth they are more
    likely to grow up in a stable environment. This
    is not foolproof, however, and there are steps
    that need to be taken to maintain this type of
    relationship.
  • Its also been theorized that infants that have
    attached to both parents tend to lead more stable
    lives.
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