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Social and Personality Development in Infancy

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Title: Social and Personality Development in Infancy


1

Chapter 6
  • Social and Personality Development in Infancy

2
In This Chapter
3
Theories of Social and Personality
DevelopmentPsychoanalytic Perspectives Freud
and Erikson
  • Freud psychosexual stage related to infant
    attempts at needs satisfaction
  • Oral stage
  • Mother-child symbiotic relationship
  • Nursing fixation
  • Erikson psychosocial stage in which attending to
    infant needs and social development important
  • Trust versus mistrust
  • Relationship goes beyond feeding

4
AttachmentThe Parents Attachment to the Infant
  • Synchrony Opportunity for parent-infant
    development of mutual, interlocking pattern of
    attachment behaviors
  • Takes practice to develop
  • Provides developmental benefits

5
Theories of Social and Personality
DevelopmentEthological Perspectives John Bowlby
  • Attachment Emotional bond in which a persons
    sense of security is bound up in the relationship
  • Strong emotional bond-making is innate
  • Bonds maintained by instinctive behaviors that
    create and sustain proximity

6
AttachmentThe Parents Attachment to the Infant
  • Mothers bond with infant
  • Bond dependent on synchrony
  • Mothers provide more routine caregiving than
    fathers.
  • After first few weeks, mothers talk to and smile
    more at baby.

7
AttachmentThe Parents Attachment to the Infant
  • Fathers bond with infant
  • The relationship depends on synchrony.
  • Fathers have same repertoire as mothers.
  • After first few weeks, fathers begin to spend
    more time playing with baby.

8
AttachmentThe Infants Attachment to the Parents
  • Characteristics of attachment
  • Safe haven
  • Secure base
  • Proximity maintenance
  • Separation distress
  • Now lets look at how several theorists
    operationalize this construct.

9
AttachmentThe Infants Attachment to the Parents
  • Establishing attachment Bowlbys 4 phases
  • Nonfocused orienting and signaling (03 months)
  • Focus on one or more figures (36 months)
  • Secure base behavior (624 months)
  • Internal model (24 months and beyond)

10
AttachmentThe Infants Attachment to the Parents
  • Establishing attachment Bowlbys 4 phases
  • How would you recognize each of Bowlbys phases?
  • What behaviors would you expect to see?

11
AttachmentThe Infants Attachment to the Parents
  • Attachment behaviors

12
AttachmentSecure and Insecure Attachments
  • Mary Ainsworth
  • Protocol The Strange Situation
  • Attachment styles
  • Secure attachment
  • Insecure/avoidant attachment
  • Insecure/ambivalent attachment
  • Insecure/disorganized attachment

13
AttachmentStability of Attachment Quality
  • Attachment stability
  • Dependent on consistency of childs life
    circumstances
  • Influenced by major upheavals
  • Internal models elaborated from year 1 until the
    age of 4 or 5

14
AttachmentCaregiver Characteristics and
Attachment
  • Caregivers and attachment
  • Several characteristics influence the attachment
    process
  • Emotional availability
  • Contingent responsiveness

15
AttachmentSecure and Insecure Attachments
  • Insecure attachments
  • Insecure/avoidant attachment
  • Insecure/ambivalent attachment
  • Insecure/disorganized attachment

16
AttachmentCaregiver Characteristics and
Attachment
  • Other caregiver characteristics influencing
    secure attachment
  • Marital status
  • Education
  • Age
  • SES
  • Mental health

17
?
?
Questions To Ponder
  • What kind of attachment do you have with your
    parents? Has it changed since you were a child,
    or does it reflect the type of attachment you had
    when you were younger?
  • What factors will influence your choice of
    childcare if the one or both parents decide to
    work? What would be best for your child?

18
AttachmentAttachment Quality Long Term
Consequences
  • The securely attached
  • More sociable
  • More positive in relationships with friends
  • Less clingy and dependent on teachers
  • Less aggressive and disruptive
  • More emotionally mature
  • Continues into adolescence
  • More likely to be leaders
  • Have higher self-esteem

19
AttachmentAttachment Quality Long-Term
Consequences
  • Attachment quality and consequences
  • Increased sociability throughout early, middle,
    and late adulthood
  • Influence on parenting behaviors
  • Foundation for future social relationships

20
Figure 6.1 Cross-Cultural Comparisons of
Attachment Categories
21
Personality, Temperament, and Self-ConceptDefini
tions
  • Personality Stable patterns in how people relate
    to those around them
  • Temperament Basic behavioral and emotional
    predispositions

22
Personality, Temperament, and Self-ConceptDimens
ions of Temperament
  • Dimensions of temperament How are these theorist
    alike? Different?
  • Thomas and Chess
  • Buss and Plomin
  • How might results differ when temperament is
    viewed as a trait rather than a category?

23
Personality, Temperament, and Self-ConceptOrigin
s and Stability of Temperament
  • Heredity
  • Identical twins more alike in temperament than
    fraternal twins
  • Long-term Stability
  • Stable across long periods of time

24
Personality, Temperament, and Self-ConceptNeurol
ogical Processes
  • Heredity
  • Basic differences in behaviors related to
    underlying neurological processes
  • Neurotransmitters regulate brain responses to new
    information and unusual situations.
  • Still difficult to demonstrate conclusively that
    neurological differences are cause or effect

25
Personality, Temperament, and Self-ConceptOrigin
s and Stability of Temperament
  • Environment
  • Sandra Scarr
  • Niche-picking
  • Thomas and Chess
  • Goodness of fit
  • Synchronous relationships
  • Parental influence with children at temperamental
    extremes

26
Personality, Temperament, and Self-ConceptUnders
tanding Infant Sense of Self
27
Stop and Think!
  • During the same months in which infants are
    developing an internal model of attachment and
    exploring their own unique temperament, they are
    also developing a unique sense of self.
  • What implication does this have for parents and
    caregivers?

28
Personality, Temperament, and Self-Concept
  • Self-concept
  • The subjective self
  • Awareness by the child that he is separate from
    others and endures over time
  • Appears by 812 months at the same time as object
    permanence
  • Self-concept
  • The objective self
  • Toddler comes to understand he is an object in
    the world.
  • The self has properties, such as gender.

29
Personality, Temperament, and Self-ConceptStudyin
g Self-Awareness
  • Rouge test (Lewis and Brooks)
  • Children at 21 months show self-recognition in a
    mirror.
  • What does this tell us about childrens
    development? How do you know?

30
Figure 6.2 The Rouge Test
31
Personality, Temperament, and Self-ConceptThe
Emotional Self
  • First, babies learn to identify changes in
    emotional expression.
  • Gradually they learn to read and respond to
    facial expressions.
  • With age and experience, infants learn to
    interpret emotional perceptions of others to
    anticipate actions and guide own behavior.

32
True or False?
  • Nonparental, quality care is beneficial for all
    children.

33
Effects of Nonparental CareOverview
  • Arrangements vary considerably.
  • Time in care varies.
  • Some children in multiple care settings
  • Younger children less likely to receive
    nonparental care

34
Figure 6.3 Nonparental Care Arrangements for
Children under 6 in the U.S.
35
Effects of Nonparental CareEffects on Cognitive
Development
  • High-quality daycare has beneficial effects,
    especially for children from poor families.
  • Later scores in reading and math related to
    daycare entry age and poverty

36
Effects of Nonparental Care Effects on Social
Development
  • Infant daycare has negative effects on attachment
    if started under 1 year.
  • Parents whose behaviors are associated with
    insecure attachment have children who are
    negatively affected by early daycare.
  • Early day care associated with greater risks for
    social problems in school-age children

37
Effects of Nonparental Care Research Challenges
  • Complex interaction among numerous variables in
    all care types
  • Nonparental care varies in quality and structure.
  • Maternal attitudes toward care arrangement vary.
  • Multiple care settings difficult to separate

38
Effects of Nonparental Care Whats Responsible?
  • Nonparental care may induce child stress, causing
    higher levels of cortisol.
  • Variations in ways stress-induced related to
    child age and temperament
  • Individual and gender differences interact with
    nonparental care.
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