A comparison of preterm and full-term infant emotional regulation development through infant-mother affect synchrony

Emotional regulation aligns goal-directed behaviour towards optimal outcomes. An integral contribution towards developing emotional regulation is the establishment of synchronised affect during infant-mother interactions. With at-risk groups like preterm infants displaying greater vulnerability towa...

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Main Author: Low, Heather Yee Theng
Other Authors: Victoria Leong
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/176830
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1768302024-05-27T15:32:55Z A comparison of preterm and full-term infant emotional regulation development through infant-mother affect synchrony Low, Heather Yee Theng Victoria Leong School of Biological Sciences VictoriaLeong@ntu.edu.sg Social Sciences Emotional regulation Affect synchrony Preterm Emotional regulation aligns goal-directed behaviour towards optimal outcomes. An integral contribution towards developing emotional regulation is the establishment of synchronised affect during infant-mother interactions. With at-risk groups like preterm infants displaying greater vulnerability towards poorer emotional regulation outcomes, this study aimed to specifically compare preterm (N = 10) and full-term (N = 10) infant-mother dyads in measures of dyadic affect synchrony and their relations to infants emotional self-regulation. In this regard, dyadic interactions during a free play task and infant performance in a response inhibition task were analysed. Several findings were revealed: (1) preterm infants experienced highest positive affect in singing/dancing, but overall exhibited significantly lower positive affect than full-term infants, (2) compared to the full-term group, mothers of preterm infants made behavioural adjustments (i.e. reduced positive and negative affect), especially during tickling, and took on more responsive roles in dyadic interactions, (3) preterm infants whose mothers responded to their emotions during dyadic interactions had better emotional self-regulation. These findings suggested that effective modifications of maternal contingent responses to preterm infants could alleviate their predisposing vulnerabilities and facilitate similar patterns of emotional regulation as full-term infants. This highlights the significant role of sensitive maternal parenting in infant emotional regulation development. Bachelor's degree 2024-05-23T02:26:38Z 2024-05-23T02:26:38Z 2024 Final Year Project (FYP) Low, H. Y. T. (2024). A comparison of preterm and full-term infant emotional regulation development through infant-mother affect synchrony. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/176830 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/176830 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social Sciences
Emotional regulation
Affect synchrony
Preterm
spellingShingle Social Sciences
Emotional regulation
Affect synchrony
Preterm
Low, Heather Yee Theng
A comparison of preterm and full-term infant emotional regulation development through infant-mother affect synchrony
description Emotional regulation aligns goal-directed behaviour towards optimal outcomes. An integral contribution towards developing emotional regulation is the establishment of synchronised affect during infant-mother interactions. With at-risk groups like preterm infants displaying greater vulnerability towards poorer emotional regulation outcomes, this study aimed to specifically compare preterm (N = 10) and full-term (N = 10) infant-mother dyads in measures of dyadic affect synchrony and their relations to infants emotional self-regulation. In this regard, dyadic interactions during a free play task and infant performance in a response inhibition task were analysed. Several findings were revealed: (1) preterm infants experienced highest positive affect in singing/dancing, but overall exhibited significantly lower positive affect than full-term infants, (2) compared to the full-term group, mothers of preterm infants made behavioural adjustments (i.e. reduced positive and negative affect), especially during tickling, and took on more responsive roles in dyadic interactions, (3) preterm infants whose mothers responded to their emotions during dyadic interactions had better emotional self-regulation. These findings suggested that effective modifications of maternal contingent responses to preterm infants could alleviate their predisposing vulnerabilities and facilitate similar patterns of emotional regulation as full-term infants. This highlights the significant role of sensitive maternal parenting in infant emotional regulation development.
author2 Victoria Leong
author_facet Victoria Leong
Low, Heather Yee Theng
format Final Year Project
author Low, Heather Yee Theng
author_sort Low, Heather Yee Theng
title A comparison of preterm and full-term infant emotional regulation development through infant-mother affect synchrony
title_short A comparison of preterm and full-term infant emotional regulation development through infant-mother affect synchrony
title_full A comparison of preterm and full-term infant emotional regulation development through infant-mother affect synchrony
title_fullStr A comparison of preterm and full-term infant emotional regulation development through infant-mother affect synchrony
title_full_unstemmed A comparison of preterm and full-term infant emotional regulation development through infant-mother affect synchrony
title_sort comparison of preterm and full-term infant emotional regulation development through infant-mother affect synchrony
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/176830
_version_ 1814047250480889856