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Mother-Infant Interaction and Infant Development Among the Wolof of Senegal

Mother-Infant Interaction and Infant Development Among the Wolof of Senegal

Diane Lusk, Michael Lewis

About this book

Ten mother-infant dyads were observed in their homes for four hours each during one month in order to measure interactive aspects of their behavior. Demographic data are included for the participating families, who are members of the Wolof in Senegal, Africa. For this study, interaction was defined as a sequence of behaviors involving both caretaker and infant which fell (a) within one 10-second time column or (b) extended over two or more time columns but which the observed judged to be a continuous sequence. Six different infant behaviors (fret/cry, extreme movement, look, vocalize, smile, touch) and five adult behaviors (touch-gross, touch-fine, vocalize, smile, approach) were recorded. After collecting the observational data, the new Bayley Scales of Infant Development were given to the infants in their homes. The most important result to emerge was that the pattern of caretaker-infant interaction was related more strongly to the age of the infant than to any other variable investigated. The results of the developmental testing are in agreement with other findings that African infants show precocious development within the first year. No relationship between the interaction measures and tests of cognitive and motor skills was found.

Details

OL Work ID
OL44853802W

Subjects

Mother and infantChild developmentInfantsDevelopmentBayley Scales of Infant Development

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.