Do helpful mothers help? Effects of maternal scaffolding and infant engagement on cognitive performance

Infants are highly social and much early learning takes place in a social context during interactions with caregivers. Previous research shows that social scaffolding – responsive parenting and joint attention – can confer benefits for infants’ long-term development and learning. However, little pre...

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Main Authors: Clackson, Kaili, Wass, Sam, Georgieva, Stanimira, Brightman, Laura, Nutbrown, Rebecca, Almond, Harriet, Bieluczyk, Julia, Carro, Giulia, Dames, Brier Rigby, Leong, Victoria
Other Authors: School of Social Sciences
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145646
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1456462023-03-05T15:33:54Z Do helpful mothers help? Effects of maternal scaffolding and infant engagement on cognitive performance Clackson, Kaili Wass, Sam Georgieva, Stanimira Brightman, Laura Nutbrown, Rebecca Almond, Harriet Bieluczyk, Julia Carro, Giulia Dames, Brier Rigby Leong, Victoria School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Psychology Social Interaction Maternal Responsiveness Infants are highly social and much early learning takes place in a social context during interactions with caregivers. Previous research shows that social scaffolding – responsive parenting and joint attention – can confer benefits for infants’ long-term development and learning. However, little previous research has examined whether dynamic (moment-to-moment) adaptations in adults’ social scaffolding are able to produce immediate effects on infants’ performance. Here we ask whether infants’ success on an object search task is more strongly influenced by maternal behavior, including dynamic changes in response behavior, or by fluctuations in infants’ own engagement levels. Thirty-five mother-infant dyads (infants aged 10.8 months, on average) participated in an object search task that was delivered in a naturalistic manner by the child’s mother. Measures of maternal responsiveness (teaching duration; sensitivity) and infant engagement (engagement score; visual attention) were assessed. Mothers varied their task delivery trial by trial, but neither measure of maternal responsiveness significantly predicted infants’ success in performing the search task. Rather, infants’ own level of engagement was the sole significant predictor of accuracy. These results indicate that while parental scaffolding is offered spontaneously (and is undoubtedly crucial for development), in this context children’s endogenous engagement proved to be a more powerful determinant of task success. Future work should explore this interplay between parental and child-internal factors in other learning and social contexts. Nanyang Technological University Published version This research was funded by an ESRC Transforming Social Sciences collaboration grant to VL and SW (ES/N006461/1), a Nanyang Technological University start-up grant to VL (M4081585.SS0), and by a British Academy Post-Doctoral Fellowship and an ESRC FRL Fellowship (ES/N017560/1) to SW. 2020-12-30T09:00:22Z 2020-12-30T09:00:22Z 2019 Journal Article Clackson, K., Wass, S., Georgieva, S., Brightman, L., Nutbrown, R., Almond, H., … Leong, V. (2019). Do helpful mothers help? Effects of maternal scaffolding and infant engagement on cognitive performance. Frontiers in Psychology, 10, 2661-. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02661 1664-1078 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145646 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02661 31849773 10 en M4081585.SS0 Frontiers in Psychology © 2019 Clackson, Wass, Georgieva, Brightman, Nutbrown, Almond, Bieluczyk, Carro, Rigby Dames and Leong. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology
Social Interaction
Maternal Responsiveness
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology
Social Interaction
Maternal Responsiveness
Clackson, Kaili
Wass, Sam
Georgieva, Stanimira
Brightman, Laura
Nutbrown, Rebecca
Almond, Harriet
Bieluczyk, Julia
Carro, Giulia
Dames, Brier Rigby
Leong, Victoria
Do helpful mothers help? Effects of maternal scaffolding and infant engagement on cognitive performance
description Infants are highly social and much early learning takes place in a social context during interactions with caregivers. Previous research shows that social scaffolding – responsive parenting and joint attention – can confer benefits for infants’ long-term development and learning. However, little previous research has examined whether dynamic (moment-to-moment) adaptations in adults’ social scaffolding are able to produce immediate effects on infants’ performance. Here we ask whether infants’ success on an object search task is more strongly influenced by maternal behavior, including dynamic changes in response behavior, or by fluctuations in infants’ own engagement levels. Thirty-five mother-infant dyads (infants aged 10.8 months, on average) participated in an object search task that was delivered in a naturalistic manner by the child’s mother. Measures of maternal responsiveness (teaching duration; sensitivity) and infant engagement (engagement score; visual attention) were assessed. Mothers varied their task delivery trial by trial, but neither measure of maternal responsiveness significantly predicted infants’ success in performing the search task. Rather, infants’ own level of engagement was the sole significant predictor of accuracy. These results indicate that while parental scaffolding is offered spontaneously (and is undoubtedly crucial for development), in this context children’s endogenous engagement proved to be a more powerful determinant of task success. Future work should explore this interplay between parental and child-internal factors in other learning and social contexts.
author2 School of Social Sciences
author_facet School of Social Sciences
Clackson, Kaili
Wass, Sam
Georgieva, Stanimira
Brightman, Laura
Nutbrown, Rebecca
Almond, Harriet
Bieluczyk, Julia
Carro, Giulia
Dames, Brier Rigby
Leong, Victoria
format Article
author Clackson, Kaili
Wass, Sam
Georgieva, Stanimira
Brightman, Laura
Nutbrown, Rebecca
Almond, Harriet
Bieluczyk, Julia
Carro, Giulia
Dames, Brier Rigby
Leong, Victoria
author_sort Clackson, Kaili
title Do helpful mothers help? Effects of maternal scaffolding and infant engagement on cognitive performance
title_short Do helpful mothers help? Effects of maternal scaffolding and infant engagement on cognitive performance
title_full Do helpful mothers help? Effects of maternal scaffolding and infant engagement on cognitive performance
title_fullStr Do helpful mothers help? Effects of maternal scaffolding and infant engagement on cognitive performance
title_full_unstemmed Do helpful mothers help? Effects of maternal scaffolding and infant engagement on cognitive performance
title_sort do helpful mothers help? effects of maternal scaffolding and infant engagement on cognitive performance
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145646
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