Socioemotional Development in Infancy Flashcards
emotion
feeling, or affect, that occurs when a person is in a state or an interaction that is important
primary emotions
emotions that are present in humans and other animals, appearing in the first 6 months of the human infant’s development
self-conscious emotions
require self-awareness that involves consciousness and a sense of “me”, such as jealousy, empathy, embarrassment, pride, shame, and guilt, first appearing around 18 months to 2 years
reflexive smile
does not occur in response to external stimuli; appears during the first month after birth, usually during sleep
social smile
occurs in response to external stimuli, typically a face, can occur as early as 2 months old
3 types of cries
- basic-hunger, moans first
- anger-excessair forced through vocal cords
- pain-sudden, followed by breath-holding
fear
appears around 6 months and peaks at 18 months
stranger anxiety
fear/wariness of strangers, starts around 6 months and peaks around 12 months
separation protest
crying when caregiver leaves, begins around 7 months and peaks around 15 months
temperament
individual differences in behavioral styles, emotion, and characteristic ways of responding
3 child temperaments
- easy-generally positive, quick to routine, adaptable
- difficult-negative reactions, frequent crier, irregular, slow to accept change
- slow-to-warm-up-low activity level, somewhat negative, low intensity of mood
Rothbart & Bates’ Classification
- extraversion/surgency-positive anticipation, impulsivity, activity level, and sensation-seeking
- negative affectivity-fear, frustration, sadness, discomfort
- effortful control/self-regulation-attentional focusing and shifting, inhibitory control, perceptual sensitivity, low-intensity pleasure
goodness of fit
match between a child’s temperament and the environmental demands the child must cope with
social referencing
“reading” emotional cues in others to help determine how to act in a particular situation
attachment
close emotional bond between two people
strange situation
Ainsworth-observational measure of infant attachment wherein s/he experiences a series of introductions, separations, and reunions with the caregiver and an adult stranger in a prescribed order
*securely attached, insecure avoidant, insecure resistant, or insecure disorganized
securely attached
when in caregiver’s presence, infant explores; when caregiver departs, mild protest, when caregiver returns, reestablish positive connection and then resumes play
insecure avoidant
avoids caregiver, no distress when caregiver leaves, no reestablishment of connection when caregiver returns
insecure resistant
alternately cling to caregiver and then push to get away
insecure disorganized
disoriented, fearful, strong patterns of avoidance and resistance
reciprocal socialization
bidirectional socialization wherein children socialize parents, not just the other way around
scaffolding
parents time interactions in such a way that the infant experiences turn-taking with parents