TY - JOUR
T1 - Poor infant soothability and later insecure-ambivalent attachment
T2 - Developmental change in phenotypic markers of risk or two measures of the same construct?
AU - Mills-Koonce, W. Roger
AU - Propper, Cathi B.
AU - Barnett, Melissa
PY - 2012/4
Y1 - 2012/4
N2 - Using data from the Durham Child Health and Development Study (n=148), the current study examines the associations between child and parenting variables at 6 months and child attachment quality at 12 months of age and maternal report of child self regulation at 24 months of age. Child and parent variables predicted distinct forms of insecure attachment relationships. Observations of infant soothability during the reunion session of the Face-to-Face Still Face Paradigm at 6 months differentially predicted children with later insecure-ambivalent attachments from those with secure attachments. Observations of maternal negative intrusiveness at 6 months of age differentially predicted children with insecure-avoidant attachments from those with secure attachments. Maternal sensitivity at 6 months was associated with maternal report of child affective problems at 24 months, but this association was moderated by infant negativity during soothing and later moderated by child attachment quality. Collectively, these results suggest the following two mutually exclusive possibilities regarding infant soothability and later ambivalent attachment quality: either infant soothability is a unique and distinct predictor of later ambivalent attachment quality and this cascade represents a developmental shift in child risk during the first year of life, or that infant soothability following a stressful task at 6 months of age is itself an early indicator of ambivalent attachment behavior with the mother. The data from the current study could not provide differential support for one possibility over the other.
AB - Using data from the Durham Child Health and Development Study (n=148), the current study examines the associations between child and parenting variables at 6 months and child attachment quality at 12 months of age and maternal report of child self regulation at 24 months of age. Child and parent variables predicted distinct forms of insecure attachment relationships. Observations of infant soothability during the reunion session of the Face-to-Face Still Face Paradigm at 6 months differentially predicted children with later insecure-ambivalent attachments from those with secure attachments. Observations of maternal negative intrusiveness at 6 months of age differentially predicted children with insecure-avoidant attachments from those with secure attachments. Maternal sensitivity at 6 months was associated with maternal report of child affective problems at 24 months, but this association was moderated by infant negativity during soothing and later moderated by child attachment quality. Collectively, these results suggest the following two mutually exclusive possibilities regarding infant soothability and later ambivalent attachment quality: either infant soothability is a unique and distinct predictor of later ambivalent attachment quality and this cascade represents a developmental shift in child risk during the first year of life, or that infant soothability following a stressful task at 6 months of age is itself an early indicator of ambivalent attachment behavior with the mother. The data from the current study could not provide differential support for one possibility over the other.
KW - Attachment
KW - Emotional development
KW - Maternal sensitivity
KW - Soothability
KW - Temperament
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84858291857&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=84858291857&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.infbeh.2012.01.002
DO - 10.1016/j.infbeh.2012.01.002
M3 - Article
C2 - 22325571
AN - SCOPUS:84858291857
SN - 0163-6383
VL - 35
SP - 215
EP - 225
JO - Infant Behavior and Development
JF - Infant Behavior and Development
IS - 2
ER -