Parent-infant affect synchrony during social and solo play
While mother-infant affect synchrony has been proposed to facilitate the early development of social understanding, most investigations into affect synchrony have concentrated more on negative than positive affect. We analysed affect sharing during parent-infant object play, comparing positive and n...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1662812023-04-23T15:30:51Z Parent-infant affect synchrony during social and solo play Kidby, Sayaka Neale, Dave Wass, Sam Leong, Victoria School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Psychology Mother–Infant Interaction Synchrony While mother-infant affect synchrony has been proposed to facilitate the early development of social understanding, most investigations into affect synchrony have concentrated more on negative than positive affect. We analysed affect sharing during parent-infant object play, comparing positive and negative affect, to examine how it is modulated by shared playful activity. Mother-infant dyads (N = 20, average infant age 10.7 months) played together (social) or separately (solo) using an object. Both participants increased positive affect during social play as compared with solo play. Positive affect synchrony also increased during social play compared with solo play, whereas negative affect synchrony did not differ. Closer examination of the temporal dynamics of affect changes showed that infants' shifts to positive affect tended to occur contingently in response to their mothers', whereas mothers' shifts to negative affect followed their infants'. Further, during social play, positive affect displays were more long-lived while negative more short-lived. While our sample was small and from a homogeneous population (e.g. white, highly educated parents), limiting the implications of the findings, these results demonstrate that maternal active engagement in playful interaction with her infant affords, increases, and extends infant positive affect and parent-infant positive affect synchrony, providing insights into how the social context modulates infants' affective experiences. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue 'Face2face: advancing the science of social interaction'. Ministry of Education (MOE) National Research Foundation (NRF) Submitted/Accepted version This research was funded by an ESRC Transforming Social Sciences collaboration grant (no. ES/N006461/1) to V.L. and S.W., and by ESRC FRL Fellowship (grant no. ES/N017560/1) to S.W. V.L. is supported by the Ministry of Education, Singapore, under its Academic Research Fund Tier 1 Grant (RG152/18), Tier 2 Grant (MOE-T2EP40121-0001), Social Science and Humanities Research Fellowship (grant no. MOE2020-SSHR-008) and by the National Research Foundation, Singapore and A*STAR under its Prenatal/Early Childhood Grant (no. H22P0M0002). 2023-04-19T08:25:02Z 2023-04-19T08:25:02Z 2023 Journal Article Kidby, S., Neale, D., Wass, S. & Leong, V. (2023). Parent-infant affect synchrony during social and solo play. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 378(1875), 20210482-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2021.0482 0962-8436 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/166281 10.1098/rstb.2021.0482 36871594 2-s2.0-85149496507 1875 378 20210482 en ES/N006461/1 ES/N017560/1 RG152/18 MOE-T2EP40121-0001 MOE2020-SSHR-008 H22P0M0002 Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences © 2023 The Author(s). All rights reserved. This paper was published by the Royal Society published in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences and is made available with permission of The Author(s). application/pdf |
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Social sciences::Psychology Mother–Infant Interaction Synchrony Kidby, Sayaka Neale, Dave Wass, Sam Leong, Victoria Parent-infant affect synchrony during social and solo play |
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While mother-infant affect synchrony has been proposed to facilitate the early development of social understanding, most investigations into affect synchrony have concentrated more on negative than positive affect. We analysed affect sharing during parent-infant object play, comparing positive and negative affect, to examine how it is modulated by shared playful activity. Mother-infant dyads (N = 20, average infant age 10.7 months) played together (social) or separately (solo) using an object. Both participants increased positive affect during social play as compared with solo play. Positive affect synchrony also increased during social play compared with solo play, whereas negative affect synchrony did not differ. Closer examination of the temporal dynamics of affect changes showed that infants' shifts to positive affect tended to occur contingently in response to their mothers', whereas mothers' shifts to negative affect followed their infants'. Further, during social play, positive affect displays were more long-lived while negative more short-lived. While our sample was small and from a homogeneous population (e.g. white, highly educated parents), limiting the implications of the findings, these results demonstrate that maternal active engagement in playful interaction with her infant affords, increases, and extends infant positive affect and parent-infant positive affect synchrony, providing insights into how the social context modulates infants' affective experiences. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue 'Face2face: advancing the science of social interaction'. |
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School of Social Sciences |
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School of Social Sciences Kidby, Sayaka Neale, Dave Wass, Sam Leong, Victoria |
format |
Article |
author |
Kidby, Sayaka Neale, Dave Wass, Sam Leong, Victoria |
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Kidby, Sayaka |
title |
Parent-infant affect synchrony during social and solo play |
title_short |
Parent-infant affect synchrony during social and solo play |
title_full |
Parent-infant affect synchrony during social and solo play |
title_fullStr |
Parent-infant affect synchrony during social and solo play |
title_full_unstemmed |
Parent-infant affect synchrony during social and solo play |
title_sort |
parent-infant affect synchrony during social and solo play |
publishDate |
2023 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/166281 |
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1764208178319327232 |