| Keyword search (4,164 papers available) | ![]() |
"infancy" Keyword-tagged Publications:
| Title | Authors | PubMed ID | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | A year of nouns from English-learning infants daily lives: The SEEDLingS-Nouns dataset | Kalenkovich E; Koorathota S; Tor S; Amatuni A; Egan-Dailey S; Moore C; Laing C; Garrison H; Baudet G; Bulgarelli F; Uner S; Righter L; Bergelson E; | 41034519 CONCORDIA |
| 2 | Infants' Social Evaluation of Helpers and Hinderers: A Large-Scale, Multi-Lab, Coordinated Replication Study | Lucca K; Yuen F; Wang Y; Alessandroni N; Allison O; Alvarez M; Axelsson EL; Baumer J; Baumgartner HA; Bertels J; Bhavsar M; Byers-Heinlein K; Capelier-Mourguy A; Chijiiwa H; Chin CS; Christner N; Cirelli LK; Corbit J; Daum MM; Doan T; Dresel M; Exner A; Fei W; Forbes SH; Franchin L; Frank MC; Geraci A; Giraud M; Gornik ME; Wiesmann CG; Grossmann T; Hadley IM; Havron N; Henderson AME; Matzner EH; Immel BA; Jankiewicz G; Jedryczka W; Kanakogi Y; Kominsky JF; Lew-Williams C; Liberman Z; Liu L; Liu Y; Loeffler MT; Martin A; Mayor J; Meng X; Misiak M; Moreau D; Nencheva ML; Oña LS; Otálora Y; Paulus M; Pepe B; Pickron CB; Powell LJ; Proft M; Quinn AA; Rakoczy H; Reschke PJ; Roth-Hanania R; Rothmaler K; Schlegelmilch K; Schlingloff-Nemecz L; Schmuckler MA; Schuwerk T; Seehagen S; Sen HH; Shainy MR; Silvestri V; Soderstrom M; Sommerville J; Song HJ; Sorokowski P; Stutz SE; Su Y; Taborda-Osorio H; Tan AWM; Tatone D; Taylor-Partridge T; Tsang CKA; Urbanek A; Uzefovsky F; Visser I; Wertz AE; Williams M; Wolsey K; Wong TT; Woodward AM; Wu Y; Zeng Z; Zimmer L; Hamlin JK; | 39600132 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 3 | All together now: Assessing variation in maternal and nonmaternal handling of wild Colobus vellerosus infants | King AG; Rissling T; Cote S; Sicotte P; | 38654439 BIOLOGY |
| 4 | An intensive longitudinal investigation of maternal and infant touching patterns across context and throughout the first 9-months of life | Mercuri M; Stack DM; De France K; Jean ADL; Fogel A; | 37337452 CRDH |
| 5 | Bilingual Language Development in Infancy: What Can We Do to Support Bilingual Families? | Fibla L; Kosie JE; Kircher R; Lew-Williams C; Byers-Heinlein K; | 35224184 CONCORDIA |
| 6 | Infants Generalize Beliefs Across Individuals. | Burnside K, Neumann C, Poulin-Dubois D | 33071864 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 7 | What do bilingual infants actually hear? Evaluating measures of language input to bilingual-learning 10-month-olds | Orena AJ; Byers-Heinlein K; Polka L; | 31505096 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 8 | Infants attribute false beliefs to a toy crane | Burnside K; Severdija V; Poulin-Dubois D; | 31309631 CRDH |
| Title: | An intensive longitudinal investigation of maternal and infant touching patterns across context and throughout the first 9-months of life | ||||
| Authors: | Mercuri M, Stack DM, De France K, Jean ADL, Fogel A | ||||
| Link: | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37337452/ | ||||
| DOI: | 10.1002/imhj.22070 | ||||
| Publication: | Infant mental health journal | ||||
| Keywords: | development; infancy; mother-infant interactions; synchrony; touch; | ||||
| PMID: | 37337452 | Category: | Date Added: | 2023-06-20 | |
| Dept Affiliation: |
CRDH
1 Department of Psychology, Centre for Research in Human Development, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. 2 Department of Psychology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA. |
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Description: |
Touch is a central component of mothers' and infants' everyday interactions and the formation of a healthy mother-infant relationship. Twelve mothers and their full-term infants from the Midwest, USA participated in the present study, which examined the quality and quantity of their touching behaviors longitudinally at 1-, 3-, 5-, 7-, and 9-months postpartum and within two normative interaction contexts (face-to-face, floor play). Findings revealed that mothers' and infants' individual touch patterns, varied according to context, infant age (time), and the specific type of touch examined. At 1-month postpartum, dyads coordinated their touch via behavioral matching and were especially reliant on rudimentary types of touch with soothing and regulatory properties (static/motionless touch, stroking). As infants aged to 9-months, dyads transitioned to a more complex form of tactile synchrony characterized by the parallel use of complementary types of touch (grasp, poke, pull). This evolution of tactile synchrony may reflect infants' growing behavioral repertoire and increased capacity to use more refined forms of touch. To our knowledge, this study was the first of its kind, uniquely contributing to the scant knowledge about the development of mother-infant touch and synchrony and offering direct implications for early care practices and infant health and well-being. |



