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Social, emotional and personality development in infancy

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Title: Social, emotional and personality development in infancy


1
Social, emotional and personality development in
infancy
2
Emotional and Personality Development
  • Emotional Development
  • Emotion feeling that involves mixture of
    physiological arousal overt behavior
  • Positive Affectivity range of positive emotions,
    from high energy, enthusiasm, excitement to
    being calm, quiet, withdrawn
  • Negative Affectivity emotions that are negatively
    toned, such as anxiety, anger, guilt sadness
  • Functionalism in Emotion new view of emotions
    proposing it is relational rather than
    intrapsychic, with a close link between emotion
    a persons goals effort

3
Emotional and Personality Development
  • Maximally Discriminative Facial Movement Coding
    System (MAX) system of coding infants facial
    expressions related to emotion by watching
    slow-motion stop-action videotapes of their
    facial reactions to stimuli
  • Crying infants way of communicating
  • basic cry is rhythmic pattern consisting of cry,
    brief silence, higher pitched cry, rest, then cry
  • anger cry basic cry with more excess air forced
    through vocal cords
  • pain cry sudden appearance of loud crying without
    preliminary moaning

4
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5
Stranger Anxiety
Stranger Anxiety infant shows a fear wariness
of strangers becomes more intense at age 9
months Separation Anxiety when caregiver leaves.
Peaks around 14 months Social Referencing
reading emotional cues in others to help
determine how to act in a particular situation
Separation Anxiety
6
SmilingSmiling communicates babys
affective behaviorreflexive smile appears
during first month during irregular patterns of
sleepSocial smile occurs in response to an
external stimulus, typically in response to a
face
7
Temperament
  • Range of emotional responses displayed by infant,
    from cheerful happy to crying irritable
  • Easy Child generally one in positive mood,
    quickly establishes regular routines adapts to
    new experiences
  • Difficult Child tends to react negatively who
    cries frequently, engaging in irregular daily
    routines is slow to accept new experiences
  • Slow-To-Warm Child has a low activity level, is
    somewhat negative, shows low adaptability

8
Personality Development
  • Trust Eriksons concept of childs ability to
    identify with care-giver(s) through a sense of
    security, unresolved trust versus mistrust crisis
    can lead to later conflicts even when earlier
    ones have been resolved
  • Self - Psychologists generally believe that
    infant constructs a sense of self through
    development of its independence establishes
    individuation

9
AttachmentWhat Is Attachment?
  • Attachment
  • is a close emotional bond
  • between infant caregiver

10
Chess Thomass Temperament
Temperament Dimension Description
Rhythmicity Regularity of eating, sleeping, toileting
Activity Level Degree of energy of movement
Approach-Withdrawal Ease of approaching people situations
Adaptability Ease of tolerating change in routine plan
Sensory Threshold Amount of stimulation for responding
Predominant Quality of mood Amount of stimulation for responding
Intensity mood expression Degree of affect when pleased, displeased, happy, etc
Distractibility Ease of being distracted or inattentive
11
Individual Differences
  • Mary Ainsworths work contributes greatly to
    working definitions of attachment theories
  • Secure Attachment Ainsworth believes that infants
    use main caregiver, usually mother, as a secure
    base from which to explore world in first year of
    life, which provides an important foundation for
    psychological development later in life. (65-70)

12
Mary Ainsworth
  • Insecure-avoidant type paid little attention to
    mother when she was in room, separated easily
    from mother. Showed little distress when she
    left and ignored her upon return. (20)
  • Insecure-ambivalent type clung to mother and
    were reluctant to explore environment. High
    level of distress when mom left and still showed
    distress upon her return. (10 percent)
  • Later studies by others revealed a 4th
    pattern-disorganized/disoriented attachment in
    which the infant appears confused and were unable
    to approach the mother directly for supported
  • even when distressed

Strange Situation
13
Ainsworths Types of Attachment
  • Type B Babies secure use caregiver as secure
    base from which to explore environment
  • Type A Babies avoidant exhibit insecurity by
    avoiding mother
  • Type C Babies ambivalent-resistant exhibit
    insecurity by resisting mother through fighting
    kicking while clinging on
  • Type D Babies disorganized disoriented, show
    confusion fear

14
Ainsworths Types of Attachment
  • Caregiving Styles Attachment Classification
  • Parents who actively participate in childs daily
    life provide stimulus in environment will be
    more likely to rear Type B baby
  • Parents who tend to be unavailable avoidant are
    more likely to rear Type A, C or D babies.

15
Ainsworths Types of Attachment
  • Measure of Attachment
  • Using a technique know as strange situation,
    researchers have been able to observe reactions
    of infants through a series of introductions,
    separations, reunions with caregiver adult
    stranger
  • Critics of this technique argue that it is too
    controlled skews results

16
Attachment, Temperament, and the Wider Social
World
  • Many psychologists, Jerome Kagan, for example,
    believe that genetic temperament
    characteristics play more important roles in a
    childs social competence than attachment bond at
    infancy
  • Would a child with a low tolerance for stress not
    be able to form secure attachment due to its
    biological inheritance or a flawed attachment
    bond in infancy?

17
Attachment
  • Mutual Regulation Model
  • Where parents imitate infants behaviors and
    facial gestures
  • Parent and infant engage in behaviors that are
    turn taking and give infant a sense of the world

18
Attachment, Temperament, and the Wider Social
World Reciprocal Socialization
  • bi-directional as children tend to socialize
    parents as parents are socializing children
    parents continue grow emotionally as they rear
    children
  • Scaffolding takes place when parental behavior
    supports childrens efforts, allowing them to be
    more skillful than they would be if they were to
    rely only their own abilities
  • Family As A System view family as series of
    subsystems in terms of role, gender generation.
    One cannot separate spousal relationships from
    those established with child

19
Attachment, Temperament, and the Wider Social
World Social Context
  • Family as almost all children spend initial years
    of life with their families, it is important to
    study structure of family its impact on
    emotional growth
  • Transition To Parenthood introduction of a child
    into a couples world can be disruptive. Research
    has shown that couples enjoyed a more positive
    marital relationship before birth of a baby than
    after

20
Child Abuse
  • Experts agree that it is wrong to oversimplify
    child abuse by ignoring fact it is only partially
    caused by individual personality characteristics
  • Abuse is a diverse condition embedded within
    social fabric of our society
  • Culture and family influences have great effects
    on nature severity of child abuse

21
Day Care
  • Where to leave children during day while parents
    are working has always been a sensitive and
    difficult decision
  • But in modern society is has become a monumental
    problem, as gender egalitarianism has provided a
    dilemma for family where both parents have careers

22
What Is High-Quality Day Care?
  • Most agree that quality day care is often
    elusive, experts have found that it is
    generally inadequate has a negative
    developmental impact on child
  • Some aspects of high-quality day care are
  • infant-teacher ratio of 3 to 1
  • presence of a pediatrician
  • non-teaching director
  • teachers aides

23
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