The breadth and specificity of 18-month-old's infant-initiated interactions in naturalistic home settings

Karadağ, D. and Bazhydai, M. and Koşkulu-Sancar, S. and Şen, H.H. (2024) The breadth and specificity of 18-month-old's infant-initiated interactions in naturalistic home settings. Infant Behavior and Development, 74: 101927. ISSN 0163-6383

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Abstract

Infants actively initiate social interactions aiming to elicit different types of responses from other people. This study aimed to document a variety of communicative interactions initiated by 18-month-old Turkish infants from diverse SES (N = 43) with their caregivers in their natural home settings. The infant-initiated interactions such as use of deictic gestures (e.g., pointing, holdouts), action demonstrations, vocalizations, and non-specific play actions were coded from video recordings and classified into two categories as need-based and non-need-based. Need-based interactions were further classified as a) biological (e.g., feeding); b) socio-emotional (e.g., cuddling), and non-need-based interactions (i.e., communicative intentions) were coded as a) expressive, b) requestive; c) information/help-seeking; d) information-giving. Infant-initiated non-need-based (88%) interactions were more prevalent compared to need-based interactions (12%). Among the non-need-based interactions, 50% aimed at expressing or sharing attention or emotion, 26% aimed at requesting an object or an action, and 12% aimed at seeking information or help. Infant-initiated information-giving events were rare. We further investigated the effects of familial SES and infant sex, finding no effect of either on the number of infant-initiated interactions. These findings suggest that at 18 months, infants actively communicate with their social partners to fulfil their need-based and non-need-based motivations using a wide range of verbal and nonverbal behaviors, regardless of their sex and socio-economic background. This study thoroughly characterizes a wide and detailed range of infant-initiated spontaneous communicative bids in hard-to-access contexts (infants' daily lives at home) and with a traditionally underrepresented non-WEIRD population.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Infant Behavior and Development
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/3200/3204
Subjects:
?? infant-caregiver interactionscommunicationinfant-initiated interactionscommunicative intentionsdevelopmental and educational psychology ??
ID Code:
216303
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
15 Mar 2024 13:20
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
31 Mar 2024 03:01