Infant distractibility from social events mediates the relation between maternal responsiveness and infant language outcomes

Research demonstrates that contingent and appropriate maternal responsiveness to infant requests and bids for attention leads to better language outcomes. Research also indicates that infants who are less distracted by irrelevant competing stimulation and attend efficiently to audiovisual social eve...

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Veröffentlicht in:Infant behavior & development 2023-05, Vol.71, p.101840-101840, Article 101840
Hauptverfasser: Testa, Kaitlyn, McNew, Myriah E., Todd, James Torrence, Eschman, Bret, Bahrick, Lorraine E.
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container_title Infant behavior & development
container_volume 71
creator Testa, Kaitlyn
McNew, Myriah E.
Todd, James Torrence
Eschman, Bret
Bahrick, Lorraine E.
description Research demonstrates that contingent and appropriate maternal responsiveness to infant requests and bids for attention leads to better language outcomes. Research also indicates that infants who are less distracted by irrelevant competing stimulation and attend efficiently to audiovisual social events (e.g., faces and voices) show better language outcomes. However, few studies have assessed relations between maternal responsiveness, infant attention to faces and voices, and distractibility, and how together these factors lead to early language outcomes. A newly developed audiovisual protocol, the Multisensory Attention Assessment Protocol (MAAP; Bahrick et al., 2018), allows researchers to examine individual differences in attention to faces and voices and distractibility, and to assess relations with other variables. At 12 months, infants (n = 79) in an ongoing longitudinal study participated in the MAAP to assess intersensory matching of synchronous faces and voices and attention to an irrelevant competing visual distractor event. They also were observed in a brief play interaction to assess infant bids for attention and maternal responsiveness (accept, redirect, or ignore). At 18 months, receptive and expressive language were assessed using the Mullen Scales of Early Learning. Several noteworthy findings emerged: 1) mothers were generally responsive, accepting 74% and redirecting 14% of infant bids, 2) infants who had a greater number of their bids redirected by mothers, and who had better intersensory matching of synchronous faces and voices, showed less attention to the distractor, and 3) infants who showed less attention to the distractor had better receptive language. Findings demonstrate that maternal redirecting of infant attention by mothers who are generally responsive may promote better infant attentional control (lower distractibility) which in turn predicts better receptive language in toddlers. •For 12-month-old infants, the vast majority (74%) of infant bids for attention are accepted by mothers while a smaller amount (14%) are redirected.•Mothers who redirected their infant’s attention more often had infants who were less distractible when viewing social events.•Infants who were better at matching faces and voices were also less distractible when viewing social events.•12-month-old infants who were less distractible had greater receptive vocabulary sizes at 18-months.•Successfully redirecting infant attention may promote better attention
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ispartof Infant behavior & development, 2023-05, Vol.71, p.101840-101840, Article 101840
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Bids for attention
Female
Humans
Infant
Infant distractibility
Intersensory matching
Language
Language Development
Longitudinal Studies
Maternal responsiveness
Mother-Child Relations
Mothers
Receptive language
Redirecting attention
title Infant distractibility from social events mediates the relation between maternal responsiveness and infant language outcomes
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