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Infant-parent emotional synchrony during social and non-social play

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Posterpeer-review

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Infant-parent emotional synchrony during social and non-social play. / Fujita, Sayaka; Clackson, Kaili; Georgieva, Stanimira et al.
2019. Poster session presented at 4th Lancaster Conference of Infant and Child Development (LCICD 2019), Lancaster, United Kingdom.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Posterpeer-review

Harvard

Fujita, S, Clackson, K, Georgieva, S, Wass, S, Neale, D, Ramchandani, P & Leong, V 2019, 'Infant-parent emotional synchrony during social and non-social play', 4th Lancaster Conference of Infant and Child Development (LCICD 2019), Lancaster, United Kingdom, 21/08/19 - 23/08/19.

APA

Fujita, S., Clackson, K., Georgieva, S., Wass, S., Neale, D., Ramchandani, P., & Leong, V. (2019). Infant-parent emotional synchrony during social and non-social play. Poster session presented at 4th Lancaster Conference of Infant and Child Development (LCICD 2019), Lancaster, United Kingdom.

Vancouver

Fujita S, Clackson K, Georgieva S, Wass S, Neale D, Ramchandani P et al.. Infant-parent emotional synchrony during social and non-social play. 2019. Poster session presented at 4th Lancaster Conference of Infant and Child Development (LCICD 2019), Lancaster, United Kingdom.

Author

Fujita, Sayaka ; Clackson, Kaili ; Georgieva, Stanimira et al. / Infant-parent emotional synchrony during social and non-social play. Poster session presented at 4th Lancaster Conference of Infant and Child Development (LCICD 2019), Lancaster, United Kingdom.

Bibtex

@conference{1650bcce384147a08aa24f6cf955bb29,
title = "Infant-parent emotional synchrony during social and non-social play",
abstract = "There is growing evidence that early experience of play is related to various developmental outcomes, the interchange of positive affect is considered a defining feature of infant-parent play, and may potentially be critical for facilitating early positive development. Despite this, we could find no existing studies comparing the expression of positive affect in different play contexts. The present study explored (1) differences in positive affect expression between social (i.e. joint) and non-social (i.e. separated) play, (2) differences between positive and negative emotion mirroring seen during parent-infant play, and (3) the temporal dynamics of emotional mirroring (parent to infant vs. infant to parent). 20 mother-infant dyads (aged 10.4 month) participated in social and non-social play, whilst their emotional expressions were monitored on video. Our results showed that both mothers and infants showed more positive affect and more affect synchrony during social play than non-social play. Regarding the temporal dynamics of emotional responding, mothers tended to follow, rather than lead, their infants{\textquoteright} positive emotional expressions. Further, mothers responded faster to their infants{\textquoteright} positive emotions during social play as compared to non-social play. By contrast, there were no significant differences on any of these measures for negative emotions. These results indicate that different mechanisms may underpin the exchange of positive and negative affect during parent-infant interactions, and different play contexts result in different levels of positive affect, suggesting social context of play may be a crucial factor in determining play{\textquoteright}s developmental benefits.",
author = "Sayaka Fujita and Kaili Clackson and Stanimira Georgieva and Sam Wass and Dave Neale and Paul Ramchandani and Victoria Leong",
year = "2019",
month = aug,
day = "21",
language = "English",
note = "4th Lancaster Conference of Infant and Child Development (LCICD 2019) ; Conference date: 21-08-2019 Through 23-08-2019",
url = "http://wp.lancs.ac.uk/lcicd/",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Infant-parent emotional synchrony during social and non-social play

AU - Fujita, Sayaka

AU - Clackson, Kaili

AU - Georgieva, Stanimira

AU - Wass, Sam

AU - Neale, Dave

AU - Ramchandani, Paul

AU - Leong, Victoria

PY - 2019/8/21

Y1 - 2019/8/21

N2 - There is growing evidence that early experience of play is related to various developmental outcomes, the interchange of positive affect is considered a defining feature of infant-parent play, and may potentially be critical for facilitating early positive development. Despite this, we could find no existing studies comparing the expression of positive affect in different play contexts. The present study explored (1) differences in positive affect expression between social (i.e. joint) and non-social (i.e. separated) play, (2) differences between positive and negative emotion mirroring seen during parent-infant play, and (3) the temporal dynamics of emotional mirroring (parent to infant vs. infant to parent). 20 mother-infant dyads (aged 10.4 month) participated in social and non-social play, whilst their emotional expressions were monitored on video. Our results showed that both mothers and infants showed more positive affect and more affect synchrony during social play than non-social play. Regarding the temporal dynamics of emotional responding, mothers tended to follow, rather than lead, their infants’ positive emotional expressions. Further, mothers responded faster to their infants’ positive emotions during social play as compared to non-social play. By contrast, there were no significant differences on any of these measures for negative emotions. These results indicate that different mechanisms may underpin the exchange of positive and negative affect during parent-infant interactions, and different play contexts result in different levels of positive affect, suggesting social context of play may be a crucial factor in determining play’s developmental benefits.

AB - There is growing evidence that early experience of play is related to various developmental outcomes, the interchange of positive affect is considered a defining feature of infant-parent play, and may potentially be critical for facilitating early positive development. Despite this, we could find no existing studies comparing the expression of positive affect in different play contexts. The present study explored (1) differences in positive affect expression between social (i.e. joint) and non-social (i.e. separated) play, (2) differences between positive and negative emotion mirroring seen during parent-infant play, and (3) the temporal dynamics of emotional mirroring (parent to infant vs. infant to parent). 20 mother-infant dyads (aged 10.4 month) participated in social and non-social play, whilst their emotional expressions were monitored on video. Our results showed that both mothers and infants showed more positive affect and more affect synchrony during social play than non-social play. Regarding the temporal dynamics of emotional responding, mothers tended to follow, rather than lead, their infants’ positive emotional expressions. Further, mothers responded faster to their infants’ positive emotions during social play as compared to non-social play. By contrast, there were no significant differences on any of these measures for negative emotions. These results indicate that different mechanisms may underpin the exchange of positive and negative affect during parent-infant interactions, and different play contexts result in different levels of positive affect, suggesting social context of play may be a crucial factor in determining play’s developmental benefits.

M3 - Poster

T2 - 4th Lancaster Conference of Infant and Child Development (LCICD 2019)

Y2 - 21 August 2019 through 23 August 2019

ER -