Nine-month-olds' triangular interactive strategies with their parents' couple in low-coordination families: A descriptive study

Infant Mental Health Journal
E Fivaz-DepeursingeNicolas Favez

Abstract

Observing infants in triadic situations has revealed their triangular competence; namely, their ability to interact with both parents by simultaneously sharing their attention and affects with them. Infants' triangular interaction is linked with the coparenting unit's degree of coordination; in high-coordination (HC) families, parents act as a team in relation to the child, thus drawing clear and flexible boundaries with them; in low-coordination (LC) families, parents either avoid direct interaction with each other and include the child in their unit or join together against the child and exclude him or her, thus drawing inconsistent boundaries with the child. We explored the interactive strategies of LC 9-month-olds (n = 15) with those of their parents, comparing them with HC parents (n = 23) in two conditions: playing with both parents at the same time and witnessing their parents' dialogue. LC infants' affects were less positive; they addressed fewer positive triangular bids to their parents and tended to use a less triangular interactive mode. Thus, LC infants had fewer opportunities than did HC infants to acquire skills necessary for coping with triangular interaction.

References

Apr 18, 2006·Family Process·Elisabeth Fivaz-Depeursinge, Nicolas Favez
Feb 13, 2007·Infant Behavior & Development·James P McHale, Tamir Rotman
Mar 17, 2007·Infant Behavior & Development·Mechthild Papousek
Apr 3, 2007·Infant Behavior & Development·Hélène Tremblay, Katia Rovira
Jan 10, 2009·Family Process·James McHaleMatthew Daley
Jan 10, 2009·Family Process·Donna EllistonRegina Kuersten-Hogan
Jan 10, 2009·Family Process·Elizabeth A CannonMargaret Szewczyk Sokolowski
Nov 26, 2009·Family Process·Elisabeth Fivaz-DepeursingeNicolas Favez
Jul 1, 2007·Infant Mental Health Journal·James P McHale

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Citations

Dec 25, 2015·Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry·Rudi DallosRebecca McKenzie

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